Dialogue and Inner ThoughtsVersion en ligne Students are asked to match dialogue and inner thought definitions as well as examples and quality thereof. par Rocchina Bruner 1 Good Dialogue Quality 2 Bad Dialogue Quality 3 Dialogue Components 4 Inner Thought Components “Help!” A nurse ran in. “I can’t reach the water,” I said. “There’s something wrong with my hands. I’m thirsty, but when I try to reach the glass…” As Ryleigh continued to give her friends advice for getting a guy’s attention, she left them with one final rule, “Let him come after you! Guys like the chase. If you aren’t a challenge, they will move on without a thought.” “Are you all right?” my friend Karen asked as she helped me stand. “Yes, I don’t know what happened.” “I’m fine,” I insisted. “Really.” “Yeah, I know, right? Can you believe she said that?” Sarah exclaimed. “No, I can’t.” Alecia replied. “I still can’t believe she likes that guy,” Mandi chimed in. Tyler nodded to the coach and said, “Ok, I’ll make sure I tell him.” When Tyler saw Bobby after practice, he made sure to inform him that he would no longer be starting per the coaches orders. He was being benched. Anything a character says IS in quotations. Conversation between two or more characters. Is meaningful and develops the plot. A new line starts when each person speaks. Usually in italics. Something a character thinks.