The point of view used in Through the Tunnel is First person. In first person point of view the narrator is one of the characters in the story and narrates the story from his own observation. He may be the main character (protagonist), an observer, a minor character or the writer himself.
The conversation between Rainsford and Whitney contributed to the characterization of Rainford by showing how at the beginning he sees himself as a superior being towards animals and he doesn't give any importance to the pain or fear they might feel, an example of this is the phrase “The world is made up of two classes — the hunters and the huntees. Luckily you and I are the hunters.”On the other hand, Whitney believes the opposite we can see through the story how Rainford changes his mind when he sees himself on the side and we can infer that when at the end he talks about how different does it feel to be the huntee.
These sentences are also examples of the gothic and suspenseful mood of the story showing us the complexity of the human psyche
1. Option a) To inform
Explanation
The author simply conveyed some information and there was no persuasion or opinion. Neither is there any instruction in statement to follow, so the correct answer is a
2.Option a) First Person
Explanation
Writing in first person means writing from the author's point of view or perspective. This point of view is used for autobiographical writing as well as narrative.
3. Option a) Third person omniscient
Explanation
Both Third person omniscient and Third Person limited are written in the style of "he/she did this" but omniscient is all knowing - you are told more than the characters know (e.g. the character picks up a stone - "but what she didn't know was that the aincient stone, created by Gods, gives the owner the power of telekinesis"). Limited means that you are told only what the one particular character knows (e.g. the character picks up a stone - "what could this be?" she wondered").
"A snowstorm during the winter months is <span>not unusual in many places" is the only sentence that has proper noun-verb agreement since the tense and number are aligned. </span>
Narrative tends to be more of a story and persuasive is trying to get the reader to think a certain way or do a different thing