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Keywords:
Trick,
Spectator,
Impression,
Audience,
Perceives
Impression left on the mind; sensation produced.
the look or visual impression that a trick gives to the audience.
an outward appearance; "he made a good impression"; "I wanted to create an impression of success"; "she retained that bold effect in her reproductions of the original painting"
an impression (especially one that is artificial or contrived); "he just did it for effect"
a general impression suggested by the poem, an impression which is sensuous, and most often visual
an event that happens
The intended and perceived outcome of a magic trick or illusion. What the spectator thinks he or she sees happening.
The influence or result of something, using such rhetorical strategies as arguments, assumptions, attitudes, contrast, diction, imagery, pacing, or repetition. This effect could include such results as to intensify the speaker's sense of the ridiculous, reveal the speaker's____ attitude, emphasize the cynicism of ___, reduce___ to the level of low comic characters, or to glamorize a character. Also, an impression created by the authorĂs language choices which could be described as familiar reality imposed on an unfamiliar setting, sudden color in a former monochromatic scene, miraculous isolation in a hostile environment, ominous fragility in a threatening episode, supernatural inspiration of creative thought. example- " The story had held us, round the fire, sufficiently breathless, but except the obvious remark that it was gruesome, as, on Christmas Eve in an old house, a strange tale should essentially be, I remember no comment uttered till somebody happened to say that it was the only case he had met in which such a visitation had fallen on a child." The Turn of the Screw by Henry James
Any trick, but as it is seen by the audience.
The trick as your audience sees it.
How the audience sees or perceives a trick.
The trick as it appears to the spectator.
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