Well, the rising action takes up a good part of the book. It usually starts after all of your characters have been introduced along with the setting. Let's take a mystery novel for example. Think of all the clues and all the stuff between the clues. That might be the rising action. The rising action ends once you have found out who did it or the actual mystery had come to an end at the climax. But in something harder like a realistic fiction, you might see that you are starting to wrap up, you probably passed the rising action and are on to the resolution. You might have to reflect a bit to know exactly where it ended. If you are asking for a picture book -- you are crazy.
(Tip... The climax is very short and is only 1-2 chapters)
Freytag's Triangle
the rising action of this lottery ticket is the rising of the action...
what is the rising action and falling action of pocahontes
rising action of hercules in myth
No, climax is what the rising action leads up to.
rising action of death of a salesman
You can tell when a book is easy for you when you know all the definitions. If you can explain to yourself The summary,chracters,conflict,<rising action>
Yes, the exposition and rising action are parts of the plot structure that often provide insight into a character's motivations and desires. In the exposition, we learn about the character's background and initial goals, while the rising action shows how these motivations drive the character's decisions and actions as the story progresses.
rising action is when the story is about to get good in other words the part before the action or non-action
The rising action is before the climax. There the tension rises.
rising action in a literary sense is the action leading up to the climax.
Yes, falling action occurs after the rising action in a typical plot structure. Rising action builds tension and develops the story, leading to the climax, while falling action follows the climax and shows the aftermath of the main conflict being resolved.