Oct 7, 2001 09:57
22 yrs ago
English term

Pro

Non-PRO English Art/Literary
I want to know the differences between a drama and a pro for an English literature essay. I have a lot of information on drama but not pro. Please can you help

Responses

+2
1 hr
Selected

Well...

First off, you should be able to do your own homework.

But I'll give you a pointer. A drama is a piece of literature meant to be performed in a theatre. A pro, OTOH, may be a professional football player, or a golf player, or a member of this site... *g*

You sure you don't mean prose? Now, go and do some research :)
Peer comment(s):

agree Abu Amaal (X) : J.E. prose. That will get you started. But I don't think you've been paying attention in class.
40 mins
Watching NFL, maybe ;)
agree athena22
9 hrs
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4 KudoZ points awarded for this answer. Comment: "Graded automatically based on peer agreement. KudoZ."
14 hrs

Drama and prose?

A drama is usually the same as a play for live theatre, or a screenplayfor a movie (although dramatic situations can arise in any work of literature, and so they should, or things get boring really fast...).
Prose is a rather general term... to give you a rule of thumb, any literary creation that is not poetry is usually prose (novel, short story, etc.)
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