The point of view presented in the text is the first-person point of view.
<h3>Why is this the first-person point of view?</h3>
- The first-person point of view is one where a character in the story becomes the narrator.
- This character begins to tell his own story, showing what he has seen, what he knows, and his own thoughts and emotions.
A very simple way to understand this kind of point of view is to identify pronouns. This is because the first-person point of view uses personal pronouns like "I," "my" and "mine."
More information on narrative points of view at the link:
brainly.com/question/13845140
Answer:
All the tenses in English talk about time.
Explanation:
In the simple present, you talk about daily routines, facts or habits. e.g. Laura plays basketball once a week.
In the present continuous, you talk about activities happening at the moment or future plans. e.g. Kelly is studying for a test now/Kelly is working next week.
In the past simple, you talk about punctual and finished actions in the past. e.g. Juan read a great book last week.
In the present perfect, you talk about actions that started in the past but they have a continuity until the present or indefinite actions. e.g. I have visited Miami three times before.
In the past continuous, you talk about a past action that had a conitnuity for a certain time in the past. e.g. I was washing the dishes last night.
In the future (WILL/GOING TO), you talk about future short-term or long-term plans. e.g. The world will end in 50 years/Ana is going to have breakfast with her mother next Monday.
As you can see, all tenses in English make reference to times in the past, present or future and what you have to do is just to practice them and know how to use them correcly.
Answer:
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Answer:
The quotations from “A Quilt of a Nation” that develop the author’s viewpoint that America’s diversity is what unifies it are:
"That's because it was built of bits and pieces that seem discordant, like the crazy quilts that have been one of its great folk-art forms, velvet and calico and checks and brocades. Out of many, one. That is the ideal."
and...
"These are the representatives of a mongrel nation that somehow, at times like this, has one spirit."
Explanation:
These two quotations talk about putting together things that are totally different so they can work in a whole.
Answer:
It is a "limited Third-Person" type of narrator who has full knowledge of only one character, rather than all the characters, since they have no way of seeing other events outside of their own.
Explanation: