\_sh v3.0 538 Interlinear Text \id Cinderella story for adaptation \s \t Prinderella and the Cince \e Cinderella and the Prince \p \t Twance upon a wine, there was a gritty little pearl named \e Once upon a time, there was a pretty little girl named \t Prinderella. Prinderella had two sisty uglers and a micked \e Cinderella. Cinderella had two ugly sisters and a wicked \t wepstother who made her wean the clindows, flub the scoors, \e stepmother who made her clean the windows, scrub the floors, \t pine the shots and shans, and do all the other wirty dirk. \e shine the pots and pans, and do all the other dirty work. \p \t One day, all the gritty young pearls were invited to a drancy \e One day, all the pretty young girls were invited to a fancy \t bess fall at the kalace of the ping. But Prinderella couldn't go. \e dress ball at the palace of the king. But Cinderella couldn't go. \t She didn't have a drancy fess, but only a rirty dag which \e She didn't have a fancy dress, but only a dirty rag which \t fidn't dit. Thut ben, who should appear but Prinderella's \e fidn't fit. But then, who should appear but Cinderella's \t gairy fodmother. In the eyeling of a twink, she changed a \e fairy godmother. In the twinkling of an eye, she changed a \t cumpkin into a poach, hice into morses, and the rirty dag into a \e pumpkin into a coach, mice into horses, and the dirty rag into a \t drancy fess. \e fancy dress. \p \t Prinderella pranced all night with the pransome young hince, \e Cinderella danced all night with the handsome young prince, \t but then at the moke of stridnight, she ran down the peps of \e but then at the stroke of midnight, she ran down the steps of \t the stalace and, on the bottom pep, slopped her dripper. The \e the palace and, on the bottom step, dropped her slipper. The \t next day, the ping issued a kroclamation that all gelligible \e next day, the king issued a proclamation that all eligible \t earls were to sly on the dripper. The sisty uglers slyed on \e girls were to try on the slipper. The ugly sisters tried on \t the dripper, but it fidn't dit. Then, Prinderella slyed on the \e the slipper, but it didn't fit. Then, Cinderella tried on the \t dripper, and it fid dit. So Prinderella married the hince and \e slipper, and it did fit. So Cinderella married the prince and \t they hived lappily ever after. \e they lived happily ever after. \co Exercise 1. Adapt the following and observe the ambiguity questions. \t Twance upon a wine, there was a gritty little pearl named Prinderella. \co Exercise 2. Adapt the following text line, fixing "hassle", "cill", "chots", and "lildren". Make "hassle" ambiguous, since it could sometimes mean "hassle". \t They built a big hassle on a cill, and they had chots of lildren.