THE BEGINNING - Scrooge is a money lender and merchant and doesn't care about anyone except himself and because of past experiences hates Christmas
THE RISING ACTION - Scrooge is set to meet three ghosts and is confused and annoyed because he does not believe they exist. Following Marley's foretelling he soon understands that ghosts the do exist among the people.
THE CLIMAX - Scrooge meets the ghost of Christmas Yet To Come and he is shown that soon he will die and no one will care about him or his lief and potentially will spend eternity in torment
THE FALLING ACTION - Scrooge is awake and back to the living world having sworn to change and keep Christmas in his heart forever more .
RESOLUTION -Scrooge has changes and seeks out his family to spend Christmas with and rewards his faithful employee Bob with a rise and a full Christmas feast. He seeks out the two business men who asked for a charitable donation and gives them a promise of a large sum with interest for all the times he refused them
Freytag's Pyramid is a dramatic structure that consists of five parts: exposition, rising action, climax, falling action, and resolution. In "A Christmas Carol," the exposition introduces the main characters and setting, the rising action develops Scrooge's transformation through the visits of the ghosts, the climax is when Scrooge realizes the error of his ways and decides to change, the falling action shows Scrooge's repentance and redemption, and the resolution is when Scrooge becomes a kinder and more generous person.
characterization
Act V corresponds to the resolution and denouement in Freytag's pyramid.
Rising Action
The rising action comes after the climax.
exposition
Denouement ~Apex~
Denouement Hehe I love apex
a Christmas carol
maybe because a chirstmas carol has to do with christmas .
Exposition (Establish the meaning or purpose) Rising Action Climax Falling Action Denouement (final outcome)
The original title of "A Christmas Carol" was "A Christmas Carol in Prose, Being a Ghost Story of Christmas," when it was first published in 1843.
The correct word in this case would be Christmas carol.