describe all types of tenses I mean how do I identify them if they are given altogether ??
Answers
Answer:
there are three types of tenses
1. present tense
2. past tense
3. future tense
Explanation:
1.present tense
. simple present tense
. present continuous tense
. present perfect tense
. present perfect continuous tense
2. past tense
simple past tense
past continuous tense
past perfect tense
past perfect continuous tense
3. future tense
. simple future tense
. future continuous tense
future perfect tense
. future perfect continuous tense
Answer:It’s that time of year when thousands of writers around the world prepare to type faster than a speeding bullet, drink coffee more powerful than a locomotive, and leap tall deadlines in a single bound. We’re talking about National Novel Writing Month (also known as NaNoWriMo), and the challenge, should you choose to accept it, is to create a 50,000-word story from scratch in just 30 days, from November 1–30. How’s that for productivity?
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The game is afoot: Plotting and outlining
Are you the sort of writer who wants a solid plan in place before typing “Chapter 1?” You’ll need a roadmap that begins with a premise and culminates in an outline. There are a lot of different ways to get there, so we’ve made templates to walk you through several of the most popular plotting methods. Choose the one that fits your personal style:
Novel Outline Table
1. Story premise worksheet
Your premise is the foundation on which the entire novel is built. With this step-by-step guide, you’ll think about who your protagonist is, what he or she wants, and the problems or conflicts they must overcome. The end product is a concise, two-sentence explanation of what your story is about.
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Remember learning in school that all stories should have a beginning, middle, and end? This classic, logical method of storytelling takes you from your story’s initial setup and inciting incident through rising action, turning points, and resolution.
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3. Story beats template
Adapted from the world of screenwriting, this popular method replaces the concept of acts with a set of milestones that commonly appear in many kinds of stories. Hitting these “beats” gives your story a rhythm while leaving the details open to your imagination.
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4. Snowflake method checklist
Maybe you’d rather work from the top down than from the ground up. Inspired by fractal geometry (really!), Randy Ingermanson’s “snowflake method” grows an entire novel from a single sentence. Each step of the process methodically expands upon the one before, filling in detail until you have a complete draft.
Explanation: