Asked by dk
Which line of dialogue might an author give to a character in a narrative to build indirect characterization?(1 point)%0D%0AResponses%0D%0A%0D%0A“I am very frustrated,” said Simon. “I combed the entire city trying to find that motorcycle helmet, and not one store has it!”%0D%0A“I am very frustrated,” said Simon. “I combed the entire city trying to find that motorcycle helmet, and not one store has it!”%0D%0A%0D%0A“I saw the woman come into the bank,” Catherine recounted. “She was slender, with dark hair and wearing a red shirt.”%0D%0A“I saw the woman come into the bank,” Catherine recounted. “She was slender, with dark hair and wearing a red shirt.”%0D%0A%0D%0A“I just finished cleaning the entire office,” said Samuel. “But I’m going through one more time to see if I missed anything.”%0D%0A“I just finished cleaning the entire office,” said Samuel. “But I’m going through one more time to see if I missed anything.”%0D%0A%0D%0A“The meeting was closed to the public,” noted Brianna. “Like everyone else, I’m suspicious and more than a litt
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GPT-5 mini
AI
“I just finished cleaning the entire office,” said Samuel. “But I’m going through one more time to see if I missed anything.”
Reason: it shows Samuel’s meticulous/perfectionist nature through his actions and speech rather than directly stating a trait.
Reason: it shows Samuel’s meticulous/perfectionist nature through his actions and speech rather than directly stating a trait.
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