Yes!!!! but what’s the question???
The narrative voice of the statement is described by the following statement-The paragraph has a first-person narrator sharing an eyewitness account.
Explanation:
we can see in the question that the narrator talks like a first person by using words like "I, me, my, mine, we, us, our, ours."
"I, me, my, mine" are called first-person singular pronouns. These are pronouns one uses when one states his action..
"We, us, our, ours" are first person possessive pronouns. we make use of such pronouns when we are talk about the acts of the other person . .
- "First-person singular pronouns are 'I,' 'me,' 'my,' and 'mine.
- ' First-person plural pronouns are 'we,' 'us,' 'our,' and 'ours. '
- First-person possessive pronouns are 'my,' 'mine,' 'our,' and 'ours. '
- First-person subjective pronouns are 'I,' 'we,' 'my,' and 'our."
Thus we can say that the narrative voice of the statement is described by the statement that -The paragraph has a first-person narrator sharing an eyewitness account.
Hey there,
The answer is fact.
Hope this helps :))
<em>~Top♥</em>
I think the correct answer from the choices listed above is option D. The statement that it's a way to impress the interviewer with your expansive vocabulary is not a reason to <span>research and prepare some questions for the interviewer to answer. Hope this helps. Have a nice day.</span>
This poem refers to the real-word issue of the genocide of the Jewish population in Europe during Second World War, and specifically to the systematic extermination in the death camps, where people got tatoos with numbers upon their arrival