Homework Chapter 2 Part 2 Name ____________________ ZID# _________________ GIVEN the following tables and relationships grades(zid‚cl_id‚ grade) faculty(fid‚ fname‚ lname‚ zipcode‚ email_address) zip(zipcode‚ city‚ state) courses(c_num‚ course_name‚ course_description‚ credit_hrs) classes(cl_id‚ c_num‚ fid) student(zid‚ fname‚ lname‚ zipcode‚ email_address‚ adv_id) with the following referential integrity courses(c_num) -> classes(c_num) student(zid) -> grades(zid) classes(cl_id)
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and punctuation: 1. Name and year of release of the film. 4 points The name of the film is A Street Car Named Desire released in Sep 19‚ 1951. 2. Director and screenwriter 4 points The director of the film is Elia Kazan[->0] and the screenwriter of the film is Tennessee Williams[->1]. 3. What was the type or genre of the film? 2 points The film is typically categorized as a tragedy and drama. 4. What are the names of the main figures (documentary) or major characters (narrative) and
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In Arthur Miller’s The Crucible‚ names are of the utmost importance to many Puritans because they resemble reputation and social status. During Act 4 when John Proctor is being persuaded to confess to witchcraft‚ an altercation about signing away Proctor’s name occurs. Reverend Parris argues‚ “It is a weighty name; it will strike the village that Proctor confess. I beg you‚ let him sign it…” (Miller 131) By saying‚ “it will strike the village that Proctor confess‚” Parris attempts to coax Judge Danforth
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lighting‚ camera techniques‚ and sound. Analyse how a character is developed in a visual text you have studied. Often a visual text conveys a message about a character through various filmic techniques. This is certainly true in the film “In The Name of the Father”. This story is mainly about a young man who is arrested for a crime he did not commit and how a relationship between father and son blooms amidst the tragedy. The main character‚ Gerry Conlon‚ is first portrayed to the viewer as an unruly
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significance of the title becomes apparent to the reader only gradually. Using Heart of Darkness‚ show how the significance of its title is developed through the author’s use of devices such as contrast‚ repetition‚ allusion‚ and point of view. Behind The Name Heart of Darkness The heart of darkness in the title Heart of Darkness by Joseph Conrad is the heart of Africa‚ the heart of everything that is the rejection of established social principles and beliefs‚ corrupt‚ and barbaric‚ and perhaps the
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What’s in a Name? By Delaney Hoke P6 My mother was at an ultrasound for me‚ and was reading a Reader’s Digest when she spotted a name of an author. And although Delaney was their last name‚ she loved it as a first name for me. She asked my dad about the name Delaney‚ and instantly loved it because his favorite musician‚ Jimmy Buffett‚ has a song called “Delaney Talks to Statues”. My parents had already agreed on the name even before they knew if I was a boy or a girl. My middle name Nadine‚ comes
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The Crucible there are many themes floating around. One of the most notable themes is the importance of a good name. To several of the characters the only matter of importance seems to be their name and what it seems to be associated with. Amongst this dialog we find that because the hysterical environment of Salem causes persecution of calumny became a common fear of a good‚ respectable name to be tarnished. Early in the play we are introduced with our first couple of victims due to the infamous
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unimportant parts of their lives for granted‚ including their names. A name‚ provided by a mother and father‚ is incredibly important‚ as it will be the one thing in which you take to the grave. I often wonder‚ how does my name‚ Owen‚ define who I am as a person? Interestingly‚ behindthename.com states that in 1999‚ there was a massive spike in percent of individuals who bear the name Owen; a spike leading to a near 150% increase in the use of the name. It appears this spike occurred in the exact year I was
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me. Suppose we give you pretty English names.” (By Any Other Name). This shows that when the headmistress couldn’t pronounce the little girls’ Indian names she automatically tried to change them to something she could pronounce. This also shows that even with the girls being uncomfortable with her changing their names‚ the headmistress changed them anyway because she’s of higher power in the school and she wasn’t comfortable with them using their real names in an English
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Name Analogies of: Oliver Twist A story of an orphan‚ lost and found. Written by: Charles Dickens Summary: Oliver Twist is a poor orphan boy cruelly treated in the public workhouse. Pennyless and hungry‚ he runs away to London‚ only to fall into the clutches of a gang of thieves and pickpockets led by the master criminal‚ Fagin. Befriended by a man robbed by the gang‚ Oliver ultimately learns his true identity and gains a new home‚ a fortune and a brand new family! Name Analogies: Oliver:
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