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2. A type of narrative structure where in the reader makes choices throughout the
interactive narrative, leading to new options and alternate endings.
C. Circular C. Linear
B. Interactive D. Parallel
3. Part of the plot stages where you introduce the characters, establish the setting,
and present the primary conflict.
A. Climax C. Resolution
B. Exposition D. Rising Action
4. This second stage of the five plot stages where you introduce the primary
conflict and set the story in motion.
A. Exposition C. Resolution
B. Falling Action D. Rising Action
5. This is the turning point in the story—the point of the highest tension and
conflict.
A. Climax C. Resolution
B. Exposition D. Rising Action
6. In this stage, the story begins to calm down and work toward a satisfying
ending.
A. Exposition C. Resolution
B. Falling Action D. Rising Action
7. In this structure, the story follows multiple storylines, which are tied together
through an event, character, or theme.
A. Circular C. Nonlinear
B. Interactive D. Parallel
8. A type of structure that tells the story out of chronological order, jumping
disjointedly through the timeline.
A. Circular C. Nonlinear
C. B. Interactive D. Parallel
11. At this stage of the story, the main conflict gets resolved and the story ends.
A. Exposition C. Resolution
B. Falling Action D. Rising Action
12.Part of the 3 Act, 8 sequence structure that sets up the central conflict of the
story and the main character accepts the call to action.
A. First Obstacle C. Predicament and Lock-In
B. Midpoint D. Rising Action
13. Here, your character deals with the remnants of the main conflict or
realized a new goal they have to achieve.
A. Biggest Obstacle C. Resolution
B. Midpoint D. Twist
14. A decisive moment where the main character faces the central conflict in
some way, usually realizing something that changes him/her.
A. First Obstacle C. Predicament and Lock-In
B. Midpoint D. Rising Action
15. It is the main conflict or the highest point of tension in your story.
A. Biggest Obstacle B. Resolution
B. Midpoint D. Twist
4. This structure can include flashbacks, but the majority of the narrative is
told in the order that it occurs.
A. Circular C. Linear
B. Interactive D. Parallel
6. The part where loose ends are tied up, explanations are revealed, and the
reader learns more about how the conflict is resolved.
A. Exposition C. Resolution
B. Falling Action D. Rising Action
7. This is the moment that should leave the reader wondering what’s next
and this is also the point of the highest tension and conflict.
A. Climax C. Resolution
B. Exposition D. Rising Action
8. A decisive moment where the main character faces the central conflict in
some way, usually realizing something that changes him/her.
A. Biggest Obstacle B. Resolution
B. Midpoint D. Twist
9. Here, your character deals with the remnants of the main conflict or
realized a new goal they have to achieve.
A. Biggest Obstacle B. Resolution
B. Midpoint D. Twist
10. This part of the sequence continue to raise the stakes for your main
character, usually with a subplot of some sort that builds up to the
main conflict.
A. Climax C. Resolution
B. Exposition D. Rising Action
15. This second stage of the plot where you introduce the primary
conflict and set the story in motion.
A. Climax C. Resolution
B. Exposition D. Rising Action
1. Narrative structure is about two things: the content of a story and the form used to tell
the story. Two common ways to describe these two parts of narrative structure are story
and plot.
1. EXPOSITION
2. CLIMAX
3. RESOLUTION
4. LINEAR
5. CIRCULAR
6. PARALLEL
7. INTERACTIVE
8. NONLINEAR
9. RISING ACTION
10. FALLING ACTION