by being told in past tense
A book that is fiction, but can happen in real life is a realistic fiction book.
it is when you fart on the audience It is when you have to be aware of the audience and so that you give them what they need and what is appropriate. Audience in this context can mean different things. It could be an audience in a show, or it could be the audience for a lecture or a radio or television broadcast, and even through other kinds of media. If you do not know enough about your audience and what they like, want and don't like and don't want, then you will not do well. A comedian would use different types of jokes for different audiences. If the comedian tells the wrong kind of jokes, because he is not aware of the kind of audience he is working with, then his show will not do well, even though the same jokes would be found very funny by a different kind of audience. Performers need to know who their target audience is and they would use different things for different audiences. Other forms of media are the same. A newspaper has a readership that likes certain styles of writing and certain types of news. If they don't have the write kinds of things in their newspaper, then they will lose readers. Advertising also needs to know about their audience. During different kinds of TV shows, different types of adverts will be on TV. During a sports show, you are unlikely to see adverts about make-up, as people watching a sports show are less likely to be interested in that. By having audience awareness the advertisers can target their advertising so that the kind of audience that is watching a show is going to see adverts for products that they would be interested in. The style of the ad, like ages of actors in it and music playing in it might also be there to target a particular audience. Advertisers wanting to sell clothes to teenagers are unlikely to have old people in an advert and have music that teenagers don't listen to as part of the advert.
Just wow...Anyway, in a way historical fiction can be viewed as a sub category of realistic fiction. Both take place around events that could actually happen; such as an historical writer might right their novel about a romance during the Civil War, while a realistic writer might write about a clique in high school. Both use things that are confirmed as real, and everybody knows about. I.E. Once you throw a real unicorn into your realistic novel, you're crossing into fantasy literature .
Paintings that are like photographs in their detail are described as photo-realistic. You could also describe them as very realistic.
Intended audience means who its for. Like if an author wrote a book that was adventure, then the intended audience would be people who enjoy adventure books. same with fantasy, non-fiction, sci fi, etc.
The opposite of realistic (in appearance) could be abstract, or surrealistic. The opposite of realistic (reasonable, practical) could be unrealistic, impractical, or infeasible.
I don't think their is a verb for realistic but I could be wrong
To hook a curious audience which they hoped would give them a better rating, thereby able to charge sponsors higher rates to run their ads.
it could be.
A book that is fiction, but can happen in real life is a realistic fiction book.
Realistic fiction is classified by seeing things that could really happen yet is made up.
Realistic fiction is a story that could actually happen but the author made up.
No. I'll be working
it could have happened but it didn't
The Bayeux Tapestry tells a medieval story, scene by scene, so yes, you could say it is realistic.
That's more of an opinion than a real question but how they may come of as not realistic is because they are virtual and a toy, not actual animals. But if they COULD make it realistic, then that question is up to Ganz.
note: this is a personal thought But i think it was important so that the artist's audience or viewer could relate to what emotions where being shown through the artwork.