As with any good story, it is best learned by reading it, yourself.
As with any good story, it is best learned by reading it, yourself.
Those who are careless lose everything. those who are clever prosper.
The rising action in "Ali Baba and the Forty Thieves" is the thieves decided to kill Ali Baba. The thieves wanted to get even with Ali Baba because they were furious with him for finding their hidden treasurer and taking some of it.
The falling action of "Ali Baba and the Forty Thieves" occurs after Ali Baba's brother is killed by the thieves, and Ali Baba seeks revenge with the help of Morgiana, his servant. The thieves are ultimately defeated, and Ali Baba's wealth is secured, bringing resolution to the conflict.
Since the exposition is the point of the story where background that is crucial to the understanding of the story is given, I'd say that in this work, it'd be at the beginning, when it is revealed to the readers that Cassim is rich and greedy, while Alibaba is humble but poor. This provides background information by letting the reader know the two different lives and personalities of both characters who could've ended up surviving at the end of the story. However, because the reader now knows that Cassim is rich but greedy, the reader can now anticipate Cassim's death and Alibaba's wealth.
The denouement of the story "Ali Baba and the Forty Thieves" is when Ali Baba's clever slave, Morgiana, outwits the remaining thieves by killing them one by one during their attempt to infiltrate Ali Baba's house. She successfully protects Ali Baba and his family, ultimately leading to the defeat of the thieves and the restoration of peace and safety to their lives.
In "Ali Baba and the Forty Thieves," the main characters include Ali Baba, a poor woodcutter who discovers the secret of the thieves' den. His brother, Cassim, is greedy and meets a tragic fate due to his desire for wealth. The clever slave girl Morgiana plays a crucial role in saving Ali Baba from the thieves. The leader of the thieves remains unnamed but is a key antagonist in the story.
the queen that has every thing I am really puzzled by this answer and believe to be just plain wrong. Alibaba and the Forty Thieves is one of the stories in One Thousand and One Arabian Nights. Alibaba steals from the cave of the forty thieves by using the expression, "Open Sesame" which he overhears the thieves use. I know of no queen in this story.
As with any good story, it is best learned by reading it, yourself.
The story of Ali Baba and the Forty Thieves is from The Arabian Nights, or A Thousand and One Nights, a collection of Persian-Indian-Arabian tales put into its present form around 1450, probably in Cairo.
Be grateful of what you have.
The climax of this tale, in my opninio, would have to be when Alibaba is discovered to be the second thief by the 40 bandits. After this point, the story begins to roll down to the conclusion with the repeated foiling of the bandits' by Morgiana and the eventual death of all the bandits.