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Casual Articles - An Exercise: Endings in Fiction
Stock Picks 101- Learning the Easy Way p>Learning to trade takes much longer than most of us would like. How would you like to take a shortcut and graduate early from the school of hard knocks?When I ask the question that way, almost everyone is ready to learn to do that. The problem is that when I tell you what’s required, you’ll find a reason why it won’t work for you.Here’s my tip. The easy way to save yourself AND your trading account a lot of pain is to learn from other’s Ironic Ending: This is the bittersweet ending when the hero may win with a loss with a sort of Pyrrhic victory or may win in losing. Sometimes, stories in literary and mystery genres use this type of ending. “I can’t stay To illustrate the several types of endings, let’s imagine we already have written a story with the protagonist John, antagonist Edward, and a third conflict-causing character or love interest, Millicent. Hollywood Ending: This is the happy ending where the hero will get the girl or win over a villain and bring peace to the planet. Into John’s eyes filled the light from the flicker of the Christmas decorations when Millicent handed him a glass of eggnog. “Edward is gone for good,” she said. Ironic Ending: This is the bittersweet ending when the hero may win with a loss with a sort of Pyrrhic victory or may win in losing. Sometimes, stories in literary and mystery genres use this type of ending. “I can’t stay To illustrate the several types of endings, let’s imagine we already have written a story with the protagonist John, antagonist Edward, and a third conflict-causing character or love interest, Millicent. Hollywood Ending: This is the happy ending where the hero will get the girl or win over a villain and bring peace to the planet. Into John’s eyes filled the light from the flicker of the Christmas decorations when Millicent handed him a glass of eggnog. “Edward is gone for good,” she said. Ironic Ending: This is the bittersweet ending when the hero may win with a loss with a sort of Pyrrhic victory or may win in losing. Sometimes, stories in literary and mystery genres use this type of ending. “I can’t stay Hollywood Ending: This is the happy ending where the hero will get the girl or win over a villain and bring peace to the planet. Into John’s eyes filled the light from the flicker of the Christmas decorations when Millicent handed him a glass of eggnog. “Edward is gone for good,” she said. Ironic Ending: This is the bittersweet ending when the hero may win with a loss with a sort of Pyrrhic victory or may win in losing. Sometimes, stories in literary and mystery genres use this type of ending. “I can’t stay Ironic Ending: This is the bittersweet ending when the hero may win with a loss with a sort of Pyrrhic victory or may win in losing. Sometimes, stories in literary and mystery genres use this type of ending. “I can’t stay Ironic Ending: This is the bittersweet ending when the hero may win with a loss with a sort of Pyrrhic victory or may win in losing. Sometimes, stories in literary and mystery genres use this type of ending. “I can’t stay with you with all the ugliness,” Millicent said, tears bursting from her eyes and stinging her vision. “So much hate, so much blood… No one is left from my family, but here’s the computer chip I took from Edward before he died. You can have it for whatever it is worth.” Tragic Ending: The hero loses and the antagonist wins or they both die, but even if the conflict is resolved at Hero’s expense, the argument in the story idea is confirmed. Edward lay rigid on the cold tile his eyes wide open, staring like two glass beads at the ceiling. He was dead.
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