Generally, the elements of drama that reveal the traits and motivations of the character to the audience are plot and dialogue, but other elements may do this as well.
Are less important to the overall plot
Answer:
ill help:)
Explanation:
dear phone im sorry but this isnt working out the way i planned it to. you distract me from my passions to much. i just cant get away from you most of the time. you just wont leave me alone. its a very toxic relationship. i wake up at night to you making noise. im at school and the whole time you are trying to get my attention. i just cant do this anymore. im sorry . i hope you find someone that loves you the way i did. i hope you are happy its just i cant do this anymore. i need to focus on my life and whats ahead of me . ill ove you forever and i hope your happy. goodbye. im sorry.
<span>John receives the
special treatment of receiving the good piece of meat and the warm place by the
fire because he is going to be a priest. The right answer to the following
statement stated is with the letter C. It stated that John is going to be a priest
that’s why he was treated very well.</span>
There are two truths in this passage, and, unfortunately, they do not coincide.There is the author's truth and there is a mother's truth.
No mother in her right mind would say that her son was lucky because he did not have to kill a conscript, but the author feels that way. War is a terrible thing. It is premised on on the notion that the "team" that can inflict the most damage or kill the most number of the enemy is the winner. The rules are, there are no rules. Anything goes.
So the first sentence I would pick would be the one beginning. "I thank my God he did not have to do it..." That is the author's point of view.
The second sentence I would choose is "What you got black on for ...? " This may not be what your marker is looking for, but on principle I would pick it. She is saying "We should not mourn his death. We shouldn't celebrate it either. The only good thing is that his death meant that someone else didn't die."
This last sentence is the hardest to justify. Most women I know couldn't live with the unnecessary death of a child. But the author could. He could say that such a death was needless and pointless, and should not be mourned.