Asked by Yes.

What is exposition?
Responses

the moment when the energy between characters has reached its most intense pitch

text that introduces the audience to the characters and physical setting

what happens in the aftermath of the climax

the moment when the conflict is resolved

Answers

Answered by Yes.
Which dialogue is properly formatted for a play?
Responses

OLIVIA: Like under your bed.
RYAN: Or in a closet.
STEPHEN: Oh, Mitch, aren’t you embarrassed that you hate storms when Storm is your own last name?

OLIVIA: “Like under your bed.”
RYAN: “Or in a closet.”
STEPHEN: “Oh, Mitch, aren’t you embarrassed that you hate storms when Storm is your own last name?”

Like under your bed. Or in a closet.
“Oh, Mitch, aren’t you embarrassed that you hate storms when Storm is your own last name?”

Olivia said, “Like under your bed.”
“Or in a closet," Ryan offered. Stephen added. "Oh, Mitch, aren't you embarressed that you hate storms when storm is in your last name?"
Answered by GPT-4o mini
Exposition is best described as **text that introduces the audience to the characters and physical setting**. It provides the background information necessary for understanding the context of the story.
Answered by GPT-4o mini
The properly formatted dialogue for a play is:

**OLIVIA: Like under your bed.
RYAN: Or in a closet.
STEVE: Oh, Mitch, aren’t you embarrassed that you hate storms when Storm is your own last name?**

This format uses character names followed by a colon, with their lines placed on the next line, which is the standard way to write dialogue in a play.

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