1. List four common cliches – An apple a day keeps the doctor away, It’s all fun and games until someone gets hurt,
2. two conclusions of metaphors -
3. Dangerous Metaphors -
1. List four common cliches – An apple a day keeps the doctor away, It’s all fun and games until someone gets hurt,
2. two conclusions of metaphors -
3. Dangerous Metaphors -
The wiki is helpful, but I feel like it’s the same amount of help that editing on hard copies is. Either way you edit, hard copy or online, you can still give the same kind of help to the person’s paper you are editing. I like the comments people can give on your paper because, personally, when I am writing a paper over too much time, I get sick of it and don’t think it ends up being very good. It’s nice to see what another person thinks to convince you on whether or not you need to change some things or if it’s the good the way it is. With my fairy tale paper, I felt like it was too long and confusing and was thinking about just totally starting over, but after talking to someone who read it, it reassured me that it wasn’t as bad as I thought it was, it just needs a few changes to help make it better.
If I could pick a time in history to visit, I would go back to the times of pirates and buried treasure because those stories have always been really interesting, and especially since the Pirates of the Caribbean series are some of my favorite movies. I would definitely be just an observer because the pirate life is dangerous and usually doesn’t last long.
“Galinda didn’t see the verdant world through the glass of the carriage; she saw her own reflection instead…She reasoned that because she was beautiful she was significant…” (Maguire 84)
I want to retell Galinda’s character and tell more of a back story concerning her past and childhood, like as what we read with Elphaba. My retelling will be inserted at the beginning of “Galinda” with her childhood, and ending within the first few days of arriving at Shiz.
Plot:
Characters:
Rhetorical Strategy – diction
Elphaba and Glinda go to see the Wizard of Oz towards the end of the “The Charmed Circle”, to deal with the conflicts involving politics at the time. Elphaba is most concerned with the hardships of the Animals, and tries to fight for their rights.