<span>There are indeed, several parts that make up an individual drama, such as a Greek drama:</span><span>
The ||CHARACTERS|| are the people whose words and actions are represented by actors
</span><span>The set of lines spoken in the play are called ||DIALOGUE||
</span><span>All the written text of the play is contained within the ||SCRIPT||</span>
Assuming that this is referring to the same excerpt that was posted before with this question, the correct response would be that "He appeals to his readers' emotions by imagining the consequences of not acting as he suggests," since he talks about how the US would be able to sustain itself without issue given its massive natural resources.
Plz make brainliest!
The correct option is the first option: the similarities in the wording.
When you want to compare passages, you have to focus on similarities between them.
The other options are not correct because the origins of the authors and the dates the texts were written are not relevant when comparing PASSAGES. Moreover, the last option is not correct because it highlights the differences the passages have and the instruction states you should COMPARE the passages. This means doing the exact opposite of spotting differences.
A poem's<span> subject is the topic of the </span>poem<span>, or what the </span>poem<span> is about, while the</span>theme<span> is an idea that the </span>poem<span> expresses about the subject or uses the subject to explore.</span>