gossipgirllll
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Feb 25, 2025
- Messages
- 1,273
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- Female
- HSC
- 2025
Yeah tbh for english i just memorise quotes and pray i didnt fail english soo yeah it works hahahahah
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Also what I do is pray that the marker miraculously agrees with everything I say and lowkey it kinda works cause I always do better than expected lolYeah tbh for english i just memorise quotes and pray i didnt fail english soo yeah it works hahahahah
U can add this to the list of why Eng shouldn’t be mandatory lolevery time I do english I have an existential crisis and all I can think about is how humanity managed to inflict such meaningless suffering on itself
Bro tbh I just repeat the question and always have the most shit thesis, I know it’s important but I still passyea but like unironically how DO i write a good thesis.. i kinda just prelearn a general thesis and then try to add in the question afterwards but it never works but it at least is better than trying to make a thesis on the spot like i genuinely have no clue how to do it well
bruh advanced is so easy bro if u guys don't band 6 it then its a problem yall gotta solve fr.every time I do english I have an existential crisis and all I can think about is how humanity managed to inflict such meaningless suffering on itself
didnt know standard was harderbruh advanced is so easy bro if u guys don't band 6 it then its a problem yall gotta solve fr.
its harder to band 6 standard tho fr its the trenchesdidnt know standard was harder
eliot would have an existential crisis over the fact his poems about existential crises are giving us existential crisesevery time I do english I have an existential crisis and all I can think about is how humanity managed to inflict such meaningless suffering on itself
bro standard is genuinely kinda unfair 'cause they mark your common mod and half ur short answer against us - imo if you're gonna make two separate subjects then keep them separate ykwim?its harder to band 6 standard tho fr its the trenches
Literally, they obviously mark less harsh for standard #notfairbro standard is genuinely kinda unfair 'cause they mark your common mod and half ur short answer against us - imo if you're gonna make two separate subjects then keep them separate ykwim?
exactly but like we also got the atar jokers in standard so even a bare band 5 tanks our atar like crazyeliot would have an existential crisis over the fact his poems about existential crises are giving us existential crises
he'll be like "have you guys learnt nothing??"
bro standard is genuinely kinda unfair 'cause they mark your common mod and half ur short answer against us - imo if you're gonna make two separate subjects then keep them separate ykwim?
u guys are blessed to be in adv, ext 1, ext 2 english or whatever and i dont think there's a huge gap in skill level between standard and adv english like there is between standard and advanced math so yall are luckyLiterally, they obviously mark less harsh for standard #notfair
u should've picked advanced. advanced aligns much better (but scales the exact same).u guys are blessed to be in adv, ext 1, ext 2 english or whatever and i dont think there's a huge gap in skill level between standard and adv english like there is between standard and advanced math so yall are lucky

is your thesis here? because it should be purely conceptualcan someone please give me feedback on my introduction for mod a??
'A text on its own is interesting but when you compare it with another text it becomes illuminating and dynamic’ How has your study of the connections between KRIII and LFR shaped and reshaped your response to the texts?
A comparative study of William Shakespeare’s King Richard III and Al Pacino’s Looking for Richard reveals interesting conversations on the dynamic representations of power and duplicity across time. Whilst RIII condemns Richard’s Machiavellian capacity to remain interesting and appealing to its religious Elizabethan audience, LFR intentionally collides with this by validating it as a means for self-advancement. By comparing the divine retribution and moral absolutism of Shakespeare’s work to the psychological and contextual relativism of Pacino’s docudrama, our responses to these texts are reshaped to reveal an illuminating conversation on the complexity of the human condition. Thus, the study of these connections not only bridges the early modern and contemporary audiences, but also offers a powerful exploration on the dynamic reception of timeless themes in accessible ways.
