When people speak, we expose a lot of different language characteristics. For example, the word ‘noice’ is an Australian synonym for awesome. Noice originates from the word ‘nice’ but it means so much more. People use it in a sentence when they’re saying something is amazing, eg ‘This coffee is pretty noice’. This means the coffee is more than nice could ever mean.
Transcript
Guy 1: yeah
Guy 2: ow fanks 4 answering geezer know what I mean
Guy 3: gimme dat, where ya been fool, makin us rinse out our credit leavin messages n that
Guy 2: Mr dawes is well on the warpath with you bruv yeah
Guy 1: coz of da bag n that
Guy 2: wot bag cos you missed the lesson you cheat
Guy 3: gimme dat. Da bag werent a problem, tegsy never metioned it- he bottled it- oi u comin over to mine later to play computer
Guy 1:na man im at home now i got business i gotta run
Guy 3: what business
Guy 1: business that minds its own, im out
Short Film
quote
“These violent delights have violent ends And in their triumph die, like and powder. which, as they kiss, consume “
bad things have bad ends and in your success fail, it is like gun powder it flashs quike and then it is gone
fake news Patriotism FTW: ‘Call Of Duty: Mobile’ Will Now Only Allow Guns To Be Used By Players On American Side
https://ogn.theonion.com/patriotism-ftw-call-of-duty-mobile-will-now-only-al-1839045748
When Activision first released Call Of Duty: Mobile early this month, fans were psyched to have the iconic first-player shooter optimized for Android and iPhone. Now it looks like there’s, even more, to get excited about, because the developers just revealed that an upcoming update for the game will only allow players on the American side to wield or use firearms. Hell yeah!
This is a huge win for patriotic fans who loved Call Of Duty, but always wished the enemies of freedom had no recourse to fight back against our troops.

“We’ve listened to the overwhelming feedback of fans who considered it disrespectful that you could shoot and even kill American combatants in the game, and we’ve corrected this issue to make Call Of Duty: Mobile better than ever before,” Activision CEO Robert Kotick told OGN in an interview, confirming that while the updated game would continue to feature terrorists from around the globe, this version will give proper reverence to the sacrifices of the Founding Fathers by making every service member fighting on the American side completely invulnerable.
“Call Of Duty fans will get the same pulse-pounding action they’ve come to expect as they slaughter the unarmed, fleeing opponents who despise our way of life,” he added. “Meanwhile, those fighting against the American forces will be provided with a fresh range of options like never before, such as diving headfirst in front of a tank or attempting to pick up a grenade only to have it immediately explode in their hands.”
Kotick went on to get gamers even more excited about another update in early 2020 that would strip enemy combatants of all options except for getting down on their knees, crying, and begging for mercy from America’s great liberators.
USA! USA! These colors don’t run, baby!
Newspaper report
Car Accident On TC Road.
Three teenagers were involved in a car crash on the access road to Treble Cone ski field earlier today. The two passengers appeared to be trapped in the vehicle and be suffering from severe cases of hypothermia as the temperature was dropping and the light was fading. No further information is available at this stage.
Scene Analysis
shot | angle | misbecome |
long | level | smith + neo |
close up | level | smith + neo |
mind shot | level | smith + neo |
long | low behind | smith + neo |
midshot | low | neo |
closeup | low level | neo |
closeup | high | neo in the ship |
closeup | level | neo spitting blood |
closeup | low lookup | Trinity on the ship |
mid | level | Trinity on the ship |
closeup | low | smith |
mid | level | neo |
closeup | low | smith |
mid | level | neo |
closeup | low | smith FACE change |
mid | level | neo is the one |
mid zoom close up | level | neo |
close up | level | smith is (Pissed) |
mid | level | smith + neo fight |
over the shoulder | level | smith + neo fight |
mid | level | smith + neo fight |
long | low | smith + neo fight |
mid | level | smith + neo fight |
mid | level | neo |
close up pan | level | neo to smith |
mid tracking | level | smith + neo fight |
mid | level | smith + neo fight |
mid | level | neo kicked into a wall |
long | level | smith + neo fight |
Romeo and Juliet essay
In the play “Romeo and Juliet” William Shakespeare invites the audience to explore the idea of fate. He does this through a number of different methods, including during the prologue, through metaphor and via the use of co-incidences.
Prologue:
Fate is first introduced in the play during the first 14 lines. In the prologue, the chorus says “ Two star crossed lovers take their lives” Shakespeare used this to place this idea of dying in the audience’s face. This is fate because the ending of the play is being predetermined to the audience. The prologue is one big statement giving the audience a short preview of the whole play.
Shakespeare introduces fate again in “The fearful passage of their death-mark’d love.” This means that fate was going to end up in death for both of them. When Romeo decides to go to Capulets party he decides to walk down the passage to his fateful death. The fearful passage is not an actual track, but a metaphor that means the path he is taking with Juliet to their death. The metaphor “Death mark’d love”, tells us that from the second Romeo and Juliet fell in love, they were doomed to death.
Metaphor:
Shakespeare hints at fate by writing it into many of the main characters lines “…He hath steerage of my sails directs my course.”. Shakespeare has written this metaphor. this is a metaphor because Romeo was calling himself a boat, and God is the Captain. This is Romeo giving his life to a higher power that is God. Romeo is letting god direct his path because back in the Sixteen hundreds people in England thought that their lives have been planned out for them by a higher power.
Co-incidences:
Co-incidence is used in Romeo and Juliet to bring the message that anything can happen, even if you don’t plan it. An example of this is when Romeo and Juliet meet. They should not have met, but that fateful day Romeo and his gang just happen to bump into the Capulet servant with a list to the party. Romeo would not have gone to the party if he did not happen to see Rosalind’s name on the list. This is a co-incidence that Shakespeare has deliberately inserted into the play. If Romeo had never met that servant he would have never fallen in love with Juliet, and would probably have lived. We can consider co-incidences to be evidence of fate because in the 16th century people believed that their lives were planned out by God, and if something strange happened, like co-incidence, they would assume this was evidence of the hand of God.
Conclusion:
Fate comes up multiple times in this play in the way that death is littered all throughout the play, from the start to the very end. Shakespeare has hinted multiple times in this play of death using metaphors. I think that Shakespeare has written the play so well that the quotes are so unnoticeable until you actually look at them. This play is still relevant today, four hundred years later.
Strengthening Sentences
William Shakespeare includes the idea of fate in his play Romeo and Juliet.
William Shakespeare invites the audience to explore the idea of fate in his play, Romeo and Juliet.