The answer you are looking for is credo
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Answer:
Is the sense of responsibility soldiers feel toward each other irrational? ... It's flukish luck, but you feel responsible. The guilt begins an endless loop of counterfactuals thoughts that you could have or should do otherwise, though, in fact, you did nothing wrong.
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The answer is the first option: We live on the same street.
The nominative case takes subject pronouns only, since the pronouns are the subjects of the sentences. They are: I, you, he, she, it, we, you, they.
Options b, c and d have object pronouns - them, me and him - acting as subject pronouns and, consequently, as subjects to the verbs, making the sentences grammatically wrong.
Answer:
Omniscient point of view: 1. The thoughts of all characters are revealed to the reader.
Limited omniscient point of view: 2. The thoughts of a single character are revealed to the reader.
Dramatic point of view: 3. All characters thoughts are concealed from the reader.
Explanation:
1. Omniscient point of view means the third-person narrator knows and reveals the thoughts and feelings of all characters. Readers, thus, get a broader insight from this narrator.
2. Limited omniscient point of view means the third-person narrator knows and reveals the thoughts and feelings of one specific character only.
3. Dramatic point of view means the author does not reveal the thoughts of any of the characters. We only get to know their actions. It is also known as objective narration.