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V125BC [204]
2 years ago
13

Think about the last time you were successful at something.

English
2 answers:
Marizza181 [45]2 years ago
6 0

Answer:

Ummm i think making a Successful desert for the first time before 2 days

Explanation:

yup so i don't know if that's a question

stira [4]2 years ago
6 0
Well if its a topic then you could say I succeeded at passing a test persay or something along those lines and make sure to explain.
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Write a paragraph about your experience driving through a flood​
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It was after midnight last December and we were driving home from a party. The weather in Devon had been awful, with heavy rain on our 40-minute journey there, though not enough to make us worry about the drive back. We were in our Ford Ranger pick-up truck, which always felt safe. Paul, my husband, was driving and my seven-year-old son, Silas, was in the back.
What was so frightening was the speed of it. One minute we were halfway home and driving up to a familiar bridge, the next there was water rising over the bonnet. Deep floodwater was coursing across from a nearby railway line and surrounding fields, and we were caught in the middle of it. The volume of water lifted our car up and pushed it back against a hedge. We were silent; I felt over-awed by the power of the water, and Paul was trying to control the truck.
Water was instantly around my ankles. I reached my hand back and felt it around Silas's, too. Paul climbed out through a window, at which point Silas woke up, confused and disoriented. I managed to pass him through the window to Paul, who was now on the truck's roof.
Paul told me I needed to get out, but I couldn't open my door or window. I managed to push my body though the driver's window and was left clinging on to the support between the windows. I was terrified the truck would capsize, pinning me beneath. Paul was incredulous, asking me what I was doing in the water, and telling me I needed to climb on to the bonnet, but I couldn't reach. He grabbed my hood to help, but he was at a precarious angle and I could hear Silas crying, so I told him to let go – Silas needed him. He refused, but I insisted – I wanted to know Silas would be OK. As I saw his empty, outstretched hand, the water took me away. I'm a strong swimmer, but had no option but to shoot down the rapids. Shocked, tossed and buffeted, I gasped for breath and tried to keep my head above water. There was a horrendously loud noise, like a huge wall of bubbles swirling in my ears. Bewildered, I remember saying, "Oh God, oh God, oh God!" I never expected to die of drowning.
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Lelechka [254]

The dramatic irony can be seen in option D, which shows the sentence "The lawyer holds his breath, knowing that if Fatima signs the contract, she will lose everything."

<h3>What is dramatic irony?</h3>
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Dramatic irony provides all the necessary information to the reader, but not to the character who continues to act unaware of what might happen.

An example of this can be seen in option D, because Fatima does not know that if she signs the contract, the lawyer will have a big loss, but the reader knows this.

In this way, the reader feels motivated to know how the character's actions will develop even with the omission of information and the unpredictability of the script.

Learn more about dramatic irony:

brainly.com/question/1399387

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They are omniscient narrators so all knowing
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