absolutely nothing in English. Not only had I moved from my beloved Brazil, where everyday was warm and sunny, but I had to move to a country where I couldn’t even speak the language. I felt like an outcast. When I arrived, I couldn’t see a thing; the fog shrouded…
The last scene of the film titled We’re Safe Kee, Theo, and the baby are on a boat in the middle of the ocean. There is a grey fog, light light, the only light is made to seem like it is coming from a buoy out in the middle of the ocean that they are rowing towards. The characters clothing are very dark and natural and blinds with the scenery. There pants,tops, and coats in dark grey, blues, blacks, and browns. The only bold color in the scene is the fake blood covering the bottom of the boat…
It was hard for them to travel through the fog they are followed by french. They finally reach the fort and they won’t let them in until the commander hears his daughter's voice. They attacked the french following them. After a while the general decides to surrender. The indians started killing…
Sitting in the glow of the red light that illuminates the cloak of fog around him, the radio clock seemed to mock three-time defending employee of the month Mark DeRoss, and tension rose as the timer to his right began to dwindle: 5, 4, 3… his foot, dancing with the pedal It was as if his subconscious could not bare lose to the race he had won many times before, and as the timer struck 1, with little hesitation his foot pressed down on the plastic below. An audible rev echoed as he accelerated…
their, him/her, he/she, and the characters’ names. For example, “Florence gathered her pink flannel robe closer to her neck. She glanced up, apprehensively, through the kitchen window. All she saw were hibiscus leaves dripping in the pre-dawn ground fog, and blank grey sky beyond.(3)” Frank uses Florence’s name and pronouns such as she or her rather than I/me or you, which are used for first or second person respectively. 9) One of the advantages of using this point of view is that the…
infection in the patient, leading to different degrees of liver disease and it is also able to cause systemic syndromes, even causing damages in the central nervous system (CNS). Signals and symptoms include fatigue, tiredness, impaired memory (“brain fog”), and they can even appear before the liver abnormalities (2), which means that the neurological symptoms are not linked to the stage of fibrosis in the liver. The clinical features include impairment in different neural functions, such as…
My name is Ayla (eye-la), I come from a country with no name. Shrouded in mystery and surrounded by fog, lay seven grand kingdoms and beings that can only be found in my world’s fairytales. Magic and beasts fill the land and monsters fill the sea, protecting this small country and closing us off from the rest of the world. Everyone here has magic flowing through their veins, the more power someone has depends on ancestry. What powers do I have? Well, magic allows me to learn what I see and hear,…
A SWAT buss had just arrived as I got out of the Ford Edge and put on my jacket. The night air was cold and thick with fog, that had settled in. The flashing lights from an unmarked Georgia Bureau of Investigation car, two Georgia State Patrol cars, three local patrol cars, and the EMS truck, light up Benton Powel Road. Chief Ladell had called me at five p.m., giving me the news. I drove the one-hundred-eighty-three miles to Uvalda Georgia in under two hours. There were three officers…
Personification of the Wilderness: The way in which nature is described in the book can almost be described as romantic. Such detail! The use of diction used to personify wilderness breathes life into it. “The sun sank low, and from glowing white changed to a dull red without rays and without heat..”(Conrad 3). Conrad’s style of writing is metaphorical and consists of vivid imagery. When reading I can almost see clearly what he is describing. Conrad literally takes you on the journey into the…
In addition, Chief Bromden, who is pretending to be mute and deaf, illustrates how he feels about the fog machine, “They start the fog machine again and it’s snowing down cold and white all over me like skim milk, so thick I might even be able to hide in it if they didn't have a hold on me.” (Kesey 9) Kesey allows the reader to visualize the mindset of Chief Bromden while thinking about the fog machine. While Bromden drifts from reality because of the medication or simply out of fear, he starts…