15-20
It's something to do with English lol
There are many kinds of English folktales and a lot of them are the source of inspiration for the modern fantasy genre. Such tales include encounters with dwarves, elves, fairies, dragons. While they are similar, generally speaking folktales make encounters more mysterious and mystic than the fantasy genre of today.
Medieval English Drama is also known as Medieval Theater which is European theater between the era of the fall of the Western Roman Empire to the beginning of the Renaissance. This genre applies to this long time period because so many different genres were made then. Also, this genre is known for it's lack of documentation since many in this era could not read or write.
watch the film then you can figure it out for you're self
In English, and French, there is no accent mark attached to the word, "genre." It is pronounced just was written in both languages.
what sort of town is it?
The word genre has two syllables. Gen-re.
Mike and the Mechanics is known to be a musical group in the genre of rock and pop. They are an English band and they were formed in 1985 as a side project.
The word " dreary ", not often heard in North America, would signal the reader that Gothic English sets the location and the genre.
"What gender is it?" in grammar, "What genus is it?" in science and "What kind is it?" in general are English equivalents of the French phrase C'est quel genre? The question translates literally as "It's what sort?" or "It is what type?" in English. The pronunciation will be "seh kel zhawn" in northerly French and "seh kel zhawn-ruh" in southerly French.
H.E.R.R is a Dutch/English band that was formed in 2002 by Michiel Spape. The band focuses on genre of Neofolk.
"What type of thank-you are you writing?" is an English equivalent of the French phrase Quel genre de remerciement écris-tu? The question also translates literally as "What kind of acknowledgment are you writing?" in English. The pronunciation will be "kel zhawnd ruh-mer-see-maw ey-kree-tyoo" in French.