tbag it noob
People say it was gratuitous and unnecessary, the writer says it was a part of a larger scene that got scrapped where she would change into a space suit, the next scene was in open space, but instead it was on a planet.
Besides the cave scene from the Half Blood Prince, a good scene to analyze for AS Film studies is when Dumbledore and Voldemort duel in the Ministry of Magic's entrance in Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix.
I hope so, as a black woman I would love to see that!
In the famous eating scene, he is so hungry that he eats his boots. These boots were made of licorice. Chaplin later said he had to eat so much licorice for that scene, that he would never eat it again.
Not sure as it is deleted. But I would assume he'd be surprised.
Macbeth believes that his hands will never be clean because the blood of King Duncan stains them.
it depends what kind of scene it is, like a fight scene that would be fine but a discussion wouldn't holod
Alliteration is a written sound, such as boom, or bang. So the paraphrase of alliteration would be something such as if the alliteration was "crash", the paraphrase alliteration would be something like, " the plates went crash as they hit the floor". So, a paraphrase alliteration is basically a paraphrase with an alliteration.
military
The noun 'paraphrase' is a restatement of text or words in different words, usually to clarify the meaning. Example sentence: A paraphrase for the saying, 'What is past is prologue', is to learn what will happen, look back to see what happened before.
The men admired Jurgis for what he knew about animals. (A+)
Please provide the passage you would like paraphrased.
You would have to paraphrase the story into the reading level of the kids you will be writing for.
One might paraphrase to explain complex concepts in simpler language, to avoid plagiarism by using their own words, or to condense information for a more concise presentation.
Those lines from the Walt Whitman poem encourage action by a soldier, imploring him to fight on without regard for those who would slow him down or distract him.
scene 7
To paraphrase expresses a meaning of something, either written or spoken, using different words, to clarify an original statement. To put something into one's own words without loosing the meaning