A narrator is very important to a literary piece as he gives both the preamble and the important comments about the characters as a story develops.
<h3>What is an Interaction?</h3>
This refers to the exchange of information between two or more people as they communicate about certain things
Hence, we can note that different narrators were used in the two passages and they were different in the way they told the story and their differences can be gleaned from closely reading both texts to find clues.
Please note that your question is incomplete so I gave you a general overview to help you get a better understanding of the concept.
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Mr. Utterson goes immediately to Dr. Jekyll's residence and is admitted by Poole, who takes him out of the house and across a former garden to the "dissecting rooms." They enter, climb a flight of stairs, enter a door covered with imitation red felt and, at last, Utterson sees Dr. Jekyll, "looking deadly sick." He is alone and sitting beside a fireplace in a dim, dusty-windowed room. Utterson asks him if he has heard the news about Sir Danvers. Jekyll says that he heard the paperboys yelling about it earlier. Utterson is firm. He asks only one question of the doctor: Surely his old friend has not been "mad enough" to have hidden Hyde. Jekyll assures Utterson that he will never again set eyes on Hyde, that Hyde is "quite safe," and that he will never be heard of again. Utterson is concerned, however, and betrays his anxiety for his old friend Jekyll.
Answer:
Tuesday and school
Explanation:
The "ue" in "Tuesday" and the "oo" in "school" both make the /oo/ vowel sound