BLAKE HI FRIEND ITS BEEN A MINUETE
Existe uma planilha ou não?
<u>The fourth principal part, as the perfect passive participle, is an adjective. Usually just the masculine nominative singular is given. The complete forms are: -us, -a, -um.
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<u>N.B.: intransitive verbs do not have a regular 4th principal part (because they can’t be made passive); this includes the verbs that take a dative (noceō, pāreō, etc.)
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<u> Some are listed as –tum/-sum, which is the supine.
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<u> Some have forms in -tūrus/-sūrus (e.g. sum – futūrus; veniō – ventūrus; fugiō – fugitūrus), which is the future active participle
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<u> Some have no fourth form: (e.g. timeō – –; noceō —)
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Answer:
<em>"The Tell-Tale Heart"</em> is the ideal short story according to Poe's standards.
Explanation:
These are some of the arguments why:
Length: The story is short enough to read in one sitting, with less than twenty paragraphs
Ending: In fact the story ends with a climax. The protagonist can no longer hide his guilt: he admits to the officers how he has assassinated the old man and asks them to "tear up the planks" in which his corpse is concealed.
Unity of Effect: Poe builds an atmosphere from the very start of the story that is packed with anticipation and elicits a feeling of anxiety in the reader.
For instance, in the second paragraph, the narrator acknowledges that a crime was about to be committed, and goes on to explain the different motivations and measures he has developed.
Afterwards, the old man's beating heart (the victim) strengthens this sense of tension, as when the reader awaits to see whether the perpetrator actually gets a free pass.