<span>Since they are faulty, they are fallacies, and the common name for them is logical fallacies. An easy example of such a fallacy would be overgeneralization for example, where you take one example and make a statement that all other members of the same class will behave in the same manner because of that one person.</span>
It is subjective because in research scientist usually write in detail.
I mean stranded? Cause no one ever likes to be stranded because it means your lost. (And there is nothing underlined btw. Hope it helps)
1. The POV is first person, because the narrator says ‘I’ when speaking about themself
2. When someone laughs on the street late at night you can hear it for miles, and usually if you’re able to hear it that means you’re not doing something exactly enjoyable?
3. I’m not too sure about this one, but I did some:
The cab I had was a little old but smelled like someone’s just wiped down the leather. I rarely get those fragrant kind of cabs if I go anywhere late at night. It was so quiet out, though hardly lonesome. There weren’t many people out on the street because most everyone was staying in with loved ones and relaxing. Now and then you just saw a boy and a girl crossing a street, with the arms around each other’s waist and all, or a bunch of energetic looking guys and their dates, all of them laughing like birds in the morning at something clever that had been said. New York’s amazing when someone laughs on the street very late at night. You can hear it for miles. It makes you feel like you’re not alone at all.