Sentences with phrase «write something about a character»

Not exact matches

CNN: My take: «Atheist» isn't a dirty word, congresswoman Chris Stedman, author of «Faitheist: How an Atheist Found Common Ground with the Religious,» writes that when Rep. Kyrsten Sinema's campaign said «the terms non-theist, atheist or non-believer are not befitting of her life's work or personal character» it implied that there is something unfavorable about nonbelievers.
In some sense, indeed, Kierkegaard's life could be written as a kind of dark comedy; despite his premature death, and a great number of sadnesses that afflicted him along the way, there was something enchantingly absurd about his character, a certain benign perversity that often prompted him to make himself willfully ridiculous, and a peculiarly touching element of the ludicrous that clung to him all the way to his early grave.
A second clue is something you wrote in a comment to me which I found odd (not the comment where you called me a troll — an ugly character — that's totally understandable) I'm talking about when you wrote: «I wouldn't say my «faith» changes.
It's when the Kentucky character in Re-Membering is at his spiritually lowest, wandering around the streets of San Fransisco at dawn, that he muses about how it would be great to live there (away from his wife and roots) and learn Japanese and all about Zen Buddhism, something Gary Snyder really did, after he had already written a book all about Northwest Native American mythology.
You'd have to write something appealing about yourself and something specific about your ideal date or partner, but you had to keep it within a certain character count.
There's just something about the film and the way the characters are written that negated any hard work put in by the cast.
She said: «From the moment the seven year old in me wakes up and you're having lunch in Hollywood with Rian Johnson, an independent filmmaker you really like, and he starts talking to you about having written a role for you in something, and talks about the complexities of that character.
It puts me in mind of something critic Peter Matthews once wrote about Julianne Moore's career - best (to my mind) turn in Todd Haynes» «Safe,» an indisputably great performance, but one in which her character is so unnervingly muted as to be disorienting: «It's as if the actress and the filmmaker have entered into a sadomasochistic contract whereby he binds her head and foot while she derives a perverse pleasure from being so bound.»
It's true: Ronan's character uses «cut to» in casual conversation, and her complaints («I want to live through something») are linked with wanting a story to eventually write about.
I think there was something generic about the writing for each specific Muppet, which led to some characters like Janice, The Swedish Chef, and Mr. Teeth left with only a couple of lines of dialogue not fully showing their unique personalities.
Writing a character who has been taken down just about every comedic avenue possible in the last decad and trying to do something fresh with him is an increasingly difficult task.
Encouraging students to think about «why» a character did or said something, and «why» an author may have written the text creates an environment where students are naturally making inferences.
All of these characters have done something wrong during the plot of the story, so students can write about an actual event from the book for these reading response projects.
«There ought to be something about a design that gives it more individuality, more character, and more desirability than the LS460 can muster,» wrote design editor Robert Cumberford.
Creators Brian Truitt interviews Robert Venditti — he's writing X-O Manowar for Valiant and Green Lantern for DC Comics, and is about to step in as writer of The Flash — about reading comics, writing superheroes and taking on his new gig: «You have something like Green Lantern that has a very large mythology that surrounds that character.
Above all, James is able to blend the day - and - night lives of her characters with the utmost in tastefulness, something that is incredibly hard to achieve when writing about sex in what might be its most uncovered form.
Sometimes, something about a character or a setting has seemed so obvious to me that I've forgotten to write it down.
This is incredibly important on many levels, but on a personal one, it means they think I'm doing something right with my writing, or they share how they felt about the characters I've created.
From PNWA Master Class, Writing the Breakout Novel by Donald Maass, via DeeAnna Galbraith All about building layers and surprising the reader with something they didn't expect Character Work / Openings Is your protagonist: An everyman?
Writing a Descriptive Essay Writing a descriptive essay is really all about describing something - it could be a society, or an object or even a person - you may for instance be asked to write an essay about a particular character in a book in which case what this actually means is that you have been asked to describe that person — including some events or incidents that throw up a persons character.
I started writing character sketches, little short snippets about a character I liked faced with something interesting, Conflict isn't always about people punching others in the nose.
When asked about her writing, King says, «Some people don't know if my characters are crazy or if they are experiencing something magical.
Author's Note is somewhat of general idea, but commonly you will see comments about something relating to the story; or maybe that the characters which representative of real people and real events, are fictional; or you could mention something that ties into the history of a book; or you can mention something about your writing experience like «When I first started writing this book, I expected...».
Of course I can't write about an RPG without going into the tasty details of levelling up and improving your character, and again Reckoning delivers the goods with a flexible system that's allows you to create a mixed or specialised character and change him or her in an instant to something else.
I could say something snarky like» Yer all pansies, I used to toggle binary programs into an Altair MITS on the front panel and read the output from the blinky lights»... or mention the time I learned «APL» out of curiosity (and wrote a program about 40 characters long that did about 5 pages worth of work — but they don't call it a «write only» language for nothing, the next day I couldn't read it... Yeah, that APL, the one that needs a custom keyboard with hieroglyphics on it... Ah, the days... I'm SO glad they are gone
What we also wrote in the paper is that maybe it's part of the magic of selfies that they have this ambiguous character and that you can see it as a really narcissistic thing and only from the self - presentation angle, but you also can see it as a new form of art or yeah, really telling others something about yourself.
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