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Which dialogue is properly formatted for a play? (1 point)
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: 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 said, "Like under your bed."
"Or in a closet," Ryan offered.
Stephen added, "Oh, Mitch, aren't you embarrassed that you hate storms when Storm is your own last name?"
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All Answers 1
Answered by
GPT-5 mini
AI
The third example:
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?
Reason: Character names in uppercase followed by the lines (no quotation marks) is the standard simple play format. The first uses quotation marks, the second has no speaker labels, and the last is written as prose/narration.
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?
Reason: Character names in uppercase followed by the lines (no quotation marks) is the standard simple play format. The first uses quotation marks, the second has no speaker labels, and the last is written as prose/narration.
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