Isn’t ram playing cricket?
Answer: 1. Second. 2. end 3. characters' nature. 4. antagonist 5. obstacle 6. causal link 7. end 8. third 9. climax
Explanation:
1. The second act is where the public has a notion of the story already, but the characters' reasons present.
2. The author has to have a complete idea of a character's complete journey from the beginning.
3 &4. An interesting plot is often made with the rivalries between the antagonist and the outcomes from a character's nature.
5. Obstacles in stories are often symbolic.
6. A causal link is a connection between the cause and the effect. Simple stories like "The Three Little Pigs" that have a beginning, a middle, and an ending show, show how the causes have consequences at the end.
7. Writers tend to think about how the story will end, and then proceed with the start, so no incongruences or bad endings occur.
8. The third act is where every question is answered.
9. The climax is the result of the crisis, the part where conflicts lead to the end.
Well what were your words from exercise 2...?
An argument is invalid if and only if all the premises is true and the conclusion is false.
We can test the invalidity of the argument by assuming all the premises are true and seeing whether it is possible for the conclusion to be false. If the conclusion is possible to be false, then, the argument is invalid.
A valid argument, on the other hand, is valid if and only if it is necessary that:
1) if all of the premises are true, then the conclusion is true
2) if all of the premises are true, then the conclusion must be true
3) it is impossible that all the premises are true and the conclusion is false.