dialog is a "madayang log" hehehehe
a play
False.
Yes a story boarding need a dialogue
It depends on the type of story. I'll give a few examples: A school paper (Even RELA): Not usually, but if you feel like you can pull it off in an unlikely case, go for it! You never know if you never try! A personal story (One that you're writing for fun): YES! Do it! A story without dialog is an empty story. A story you want to publish: Seriously. If you're thinking about this then you have some mental issues. YES. Enough said. Anyway, if you use this guide you can kind of see that you can have dialog in about every story!
Anything by Ernest Hemingway is heavy on the dialogue.
Absolutely a script can contain no dialog. Film is a visual medium, after all, and a viewer must be able to follow the story without any words. The 2011 film, The Artist, is a great example of a film without any -- or much -- dialog. Silent movies produced pre-late-1920s are also good examples of stories without dialog. They contain dialog, which is presented as text during the scene, but often the text is unnecessary because so much of the story can be understood visually. Plus, the 2015 movie, Minions, is another example of 'no dialog' because the characters' dialog is essentially gibberish.
Yes. In literature readers expect better dialog then what occurs in real life. There is to be little to no repetition. Better grammar. Fewer sentence fragments.
the only dialogue is him saying a single line to himself, which is near the end of the story
Your modifier 'dialogue' may imply that what you want to write is a speech.In all film scripts, the word dialog describes the words that actors speak. Dialog is only part of what's written in any script. Action, and visual clues are also documented in a script.
tanung mo sa teacher mo para malaman mo
the types of the story are the conflict, plot, falling action, rising action, setting, exposition, resolution, climax, dialog, point of view, characters, and theme.