500 Pounds
<span>"<em>Certainly—and I think I may afford to give them five hundred pounds a-piece. As it is, without any addition of mine, they will each have about three thousand pounds on their mother's death—a very comfortable fortune for any young woman.</em>"</span>
I believe this excerpt to be an example of a third-person limited, instead of third-person objective.
Third-person objective does not reveal what the character is thinking or feeling. We may get to conclusions about that through the character's behavior or through dialogs. But the author does not give us this sort of information directly.
Third-person limited, on the other hand, does offer us an insight of the character's process of thinking and feelings. That's what we can notice with the sentences "<em>He wondered where people were going as they passed by his bowl</em>." and " <em>He shivered with fear and was thankful that cats hated water</em>.
" We know the goldfish is asking himself about the people passing by. We also know he is afraid of the cat. Those pieces of information were given to us, the readers, directly by the narrator, not via dialog or by the observation of the goldfish's behavior.
Answer:
I don't want to write a full essay but here are some ideas u can alwasy include:
It's been good for your family
There has been a lot of change since we haven't been going out much
I am having a rough time in school work
Answer: I think that it means whoever finds the girl will be rewarded greatly.