Conflict is a fight or a problem. So depending how the conflict gets started, it will most likely help lay out the plot.
The conflict is what opposes the characters in the plot. Without some sort of conflict, the plot will be boring and nobody will want to read the story.
Plot is the structural progression of a story that resolves all conflict within at the end.Conflicts can be psychological or structural by the forces that form the plot.Conflicts make the plot unity a de-structured form.
Conflict drives the plot by creating obstacles for the protagonist to overcome, leading to rising tension and dynamic storytelling. It adds complexity to the narrative and often forces characters to make difficult choices that advance the plot towards resolution.
Plot, the things that happen in a story, is what develops or changes a character. For example, Bill is a new doctor at Seattle Grace. He's cocky, thinks he can do anything and needs no help. He misdiagnoses his first patient, who is then saved from certain death by another doctor. By the end of the story, Bill has learned that, not only is he not perfect, but that sometimes he needs help from others. A story where a character hasn't changed, hasn't learned anything, is a boring story indeed.
Usually it depends on the book but , the reason why is because characters are the main idea .. you focus on them I mean ... you don't read a book just to look at the words .. you actually read the book to read it so you know what's going on in the story but , anyways the reason why is because as I said characters are the main idea/main focus & say one character Tom is so sweet & then boom ! Eight chapters later he hates everyone that changed the story because Tom was all goody two shoes & now he hates everyone and everything so the whole story is upside down now.
If they don't advance the plot, you need to cut that scene. Everything the character does and says should function in some way to move things along, either by providing information needed or by actions that literally move toward the climax.
it can make the plot interesting or not interesting
The plot is what happens in the story, so of course a person can affect that by their actions.
A good story depends on character interaction - if you don't have the characters doing something, there's nothing going on and no story.
The plot and conflict is he he learned english.
Conflict
Plot is a complex term that involves a conflict at its core. Something that disturbs the harmony of the characters or the universe or something. It is this conflict that is resolved. And as the conflict gets resolved so to does the plot. For example the protagonist is in danger of being stabbed to death by the antagonist. This is a conflict. This conflict plus all the action that takes place because of that conflict is the plot. When the protagonist convinces the antagonist that he truly loves her and everything that she heard about him to the contrary were lies and hyperbola and she drops the knife and falls lovingly into his arms - this is the resolution to the conflict and thereby the end of the plot as anything that happens after that is only gratuitous sensuality.
Conflict is the essence of drama and the backbone of plot.
The problem is the central conflict or challenge that drives the story, while the plot refers to the sequence of events that make up the story. The problem is what the characters must overcome, while the plot is how they go about resolving it.
Conflict is also called rising tension.
a plot poem is a poem that has a plot, and seems to have a storyline as it goes through.
The conflict typically begins in the rising action stage of the plot, as this is where tension and complications arise that drive the story forward towards the climax.
is the part of the plot where the conflict begins to be worked out and tensions lessen
conflict
No, conflict and plot are not the same thing. Conflict refers to the struggle between opposing forces in a story, driving the plot forward. Plot, on the other hand, is the sequence of events that make up a story, including the introduction, rising action, climax, falling action, and resolution.
characters, setting, plot, conflict and resolution