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The imagination is an eye, a marvelous third eye that floats free. As children, that eye sees with 20/20 clarity. As we grow older, its vision begins to dim . . . and one day the guy at the door lets you into the bar without asking to see any ID and that’s it for you, Cholly; your hat is over the windmill. It’s in your eyes. Something in your eyes. Check them out in the mirror and tell me if I’m wrong.

–Danse Macabre,
Stephen King

How does King develop a quick, sharp, and casual style? Check the five best choices.
by using long, sentimental descriptions
by using slang words
by using very few adjectives
by using colorful expressions
by using no jargon or academic language
by using very few verbs
by using many short, common words

Respuesta :

the answers are B, C, D, E, and G.

Answer:

  • by using slang words
  • by using very few adjectives
  • by using colorful expressions
  • by using no jargon or academic language
  • by using many short, common words

Explanation:

Danse Macabre inspects the different effects individually composing, and critical kind writings of the nineteenth and twentieth hundreds of years. Danse Macabre investigates the historical backdrop of the class as far back as the Victorian time, however basically centers around the 1950s to the 1970s. King peppers his book with casual scholarly understanding, talking about prime examples, critical writers, normal story gadgets, "the brain research of dread", and his key hypothesis of "Dionysan repulsiveness".

For devotees of King's well known novel The Stand there are a few pages specifying how King got his motivation for the book  and his experience of composing it and getting it distributed.

Q&A Education