"Some shall be pardoned, and some punishéd"
The Prince is the last to speak I believe.
This was a common technique used by Shakespeare, actually, and one of the reasons it was done was to show the difference in "refinement" between characters. Characters who were educated often spoke in verse. Characters who were uneducated often spoke rudely, with none of the meter and flow of the other lines... thus jarring the listener with the difference and emphasizing the difference... you audibly hear the jarring sound of someone who doesn't fit in. Thus, Shakespeare emphasized the difference between a prince and a thief not only with costume and the content of the lines, but also with the poetry and meter, so you could see and hear the difference between the characters. B: Sometimes people cuse to many times for bing bad and know bad English.
Dialogue is described as lines spoken between two or more characters. Monologues are lines spoken to the audience by only one character. This can be a narration of events, or the character's personal thoughts.
The last lines of the play, "For never was a story of more woe than this of Juliet and her Romeo" are delivered by the Prince, as anyone with a copy of the play can find out in much less time than it takes to ask a question on the Internet.
"That heaven finds means to kill your joys with love,"
They are two seperate characters. Maybe you should make it happen.
The tiny lines at the end of characters in some fonts
120 lines and 80 characters per line In Microsoft word there is a button that counts the number of words you have made. click on it and you will find: Pages: Words: Characters (no spaces): Characters (with spaces): Paragraphs: Lines:
Color Lines happened in 1992.
Dragon has no lines, but there are many other background characters that have no lines too!
Along the coastl lines
Then they would not be supplementary lines.
At fault lines
If lines were not perpendicular,they would either be intersecting or parrallel.
there are six character
#include /*Program that counts characters, lines and spaces*/ /*Type Ctrl+Z on Windows to end, Ctrl+D on Linux*/ int main() { int c = 0; int characters = 0; int lines = 0; int spaces= 0; while((c = getchar()) != EOF) { characters++; if(c == '\n') lines++; if(c == ' ') spaces++; } printf("Characters: %d\nLines: %d\nSpaces: %d\n", characters, lines, spaces); return 0; }
Trevor Musgrove is the main character in Mary Amato's Invisible Lines.