Rising action in Freytag's pyramid rising action is the point at which
Rising action is the series of events that build tension and conflict in a story, leading up to the climax. It is the section of the plot where the main character faces obstacles and challenges that propel the story forward towards the climax.
the writer heightens the hensions associated with the main conflict.
the writer heightens the tensions associated with the main conflict
Rising Action
The rising action comes after the climax.
Exposition (Establish the meaning or purpose) Rising Action Climax Falling Action Denouement (final outcome)
In Freytag's Pyramid, rising action usually precedes other plot events. This is where the story builds tension, develops the conflict, and leads up to the climax. Rising action typically includes events that complicate the main conflict and propel the story forward.
The resolution occurs later in a plot than the exposition, rising action, climax, and falling action. The resolution is where the main conflicts are resolved and loose ends are tied up, bringing the story to a close.
It is not under egyptian or ancient egypt it only has a structure of a pyramid it has climax, rising action, exposition, falling action, and denouement.
exposition, rising action, climax, falling action, and den
The rising action comes after the climax
Beginning - Exposition - Rising Action - Climax - Falling Action - Denoument or Wrap-up
Yes, "A Worn Path" by Eudora Welty can be analyzed using Freytag's Pyramid plot structure. The story follows an elderly woman on a journey to town to get medicine for her grandson, encountering obstacles along the way. The rising action includes her encounters with a hunter and a scarecrow, leading to a climax at the doctor's office, and the resolution comes when she completes her mission and heads back home.
the writer heightens the tensions associated with the main conflict.
The term "rising action" is a term which only has application to a critical device called Freytag's Pyramid, in which it refers to the action in Act 2 of a typical five-act play, and by "typical" I here mean a Shakespearean Tragedy, since the Freytag Pyramid doesn't always fit the histories and comedies. Since the Prologue of Romeo and Juliet is not a five-act play (it is in fact a sonnet), the Freytag Pyramid and therefore the term "rising action" cannot apply to it. You could probably see that coming when you heard it was a prologue, since there is never any action of any kind in a Prologue (if there were, it would be an "Induction", as in The Taming of the Shrew).