Well the war between good and evil all started when Voldemort graduated from Hogwarts. In his time there he learned of his father, the muggle, leaving his mother who was a pureblood. This prompted him to hate all muggles and their magical children, mudbloods, because of the terrible life he had at the orphanage where he grew up.
Snape and Lily met when they were children living in the same town and they both could do magic, so they were quick friends. They went to Hogwarts and were sorted into different houses. Because Snape and James Potter hated each other, Snape was very upset when Lily started to date Potter and eventually married him. During his last few years at Hogwarts he became a spy for Voldemort. When Dumbledore needed to find a new Divinations teacher, he was interviewing Sybil Trelawny, who he thought was a freud, when she had an actual vision. The 'prophesy' was overheard by Snape, telling of a child who was born at the end of July who would eventually defeat Voldemort.
The child was still a mystery at that point, and it was between Harry Potter and Neville Longbottom who were both children born to Light families. When Voldemort heard the prophesy (only a part of it, because Snape only heard like half) he chose one of the children and went to attack the family, hoping to kill him before he could be killed. Obviously this backfired and that is where the actual story starts.
the initiating event is when the main character gets into that jail place
The initiating event in Susan Beth Pfeffer's Life as We Knew It is an asteroid crashing into the moon, knocking it out of orbit and affecting the earth in disastrous ways.
An 'Initiating Event' is an event that causes something else to occur The two examples that come immediately to mind are; 1. The assassination of the Archduke Ferdinand caused the First World War. 2. The explosion of a fission weapon is required to initiate the explosion of a fusion weapon.
Reference back to a previous event in the chronology of a story?
The tornado
the initiating event is when the main character gets into that jail place
An initiating event is an action or incident that sets a story in motion by creating conflict or change for the characters. Exposition, on the other hand, is the background information or context provided to the audience to help understand the story, including setting, characters, and backstory. The initiating event propels the plot forward, while exposition sets the stage for the story.
rising action
An example of an initiating event in a story could be a protagonist receiving a mysterious letter that sets them on a quest, a sudden death that propels the protagonist into action, or a natural disaster that forces characters to make drastic decisions. This event typically disrupts the status quo and sets the plot in motion.
The trigger of a story is the event or situation that sets the plot in motion by creating conflict or initiating change for the main character. It is often the catalyst that leads to the story's unfolding events and drives the narrative forward.
If you mean when they are in the arena, it is the bloodbath.
The initiating event in Susan Beth Pfeffer's Life as We Knew It is an asteroid crashing into the moon, knocking it out of orbit and affecting the earth in disastrous ways.
In "The Giver," the initiating event is when the main character, Jonas, is chosen to be the Receiver of Memory in his community. This event sets off a series of revelations and challenges as Jonas learns about the true nature of his society and the memories that have been kept from its citizens.
The initiating event in the novel "Hatchet" by Gary Paulsen is a plane crash that leaves the protagonist, Brian Robeson, stranded in the Canadian wilderness. This event sets the stage for Brian's survival journey as he must learn to fend for himself with only a hatchet to help him.
That is the initiating event of vision.
diffusion of Na+ into the muscle fiber
scenario narrative