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Tom [10]
3 years ago
10

What is the main difference between third-person omniscient and third-person limited points of view? An outside narrator relays

the inner thoughts of all characters in third-person limited point of view but those of just one character in third-person omniscient point of view. An outside narrator relays the inner thoughts of one character in third-person limited point of view but those of more than one character in third-person omniscient point of view. The narrator relays his own inner thoughts in third-person omniscient point of view but another character's in third-person limited point of view. The narrator relays his own inner thoughts in third-person limited point of view but another character's in third-person omniscient point of view.
English
2 answers:
vovikov84 [41]3 years ago
7 0
<span>The answer is an outside narrator relays the inner thoughts of one character in third-person limited point of view but those of more than one character in third-person omniscient point of view.</span>
Solnce55 [7]3 years ago
3 0

Answer: An outside narrator relays the inner thoughts of one character in third-person limited point of view but those of more than one character in third-person omniscient point of view.

Explanation:

The main difference between third-person omniscient and third-person limited points of view is <u><em>An outside narrator relays the inner thoughts of one character in third-person limited point of view but those of more than one character in third-person omniscient point of view.</em></u> The third-person omniscient narrator knows everything. He can tell the reader the thoughts of all the characters. This kind of narrator does not create intimacy with the reader. The third-person limited narrator, tells the story from one character's perspective at a time. This creates a more intimate relationship with the reader.

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PLEASE HELP!! (subject)+(be verb)+(subject complement [noun phrase])
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Exercise 1

1. My neighbor is uncommonly thrifty.

My neighbor - subject

is - present tense of the verb <em>to be</em>

uncommonly - adverbial

thrifty - subject complement (adjective)

2. The Oldsmobile was on its last legs

The Oldsmobile - subject

was - past tense of the verb <em>to be</em>

on its last legs - adverbial

3. Celia is the CEO of a large multinational corporation.

Celia - subject

is - present tense of the verb <em>to be</em>

the CEO of a large multinational corporation - subject complement (noun phrase)

4. The last performance of Death of a Salesman was on Friday.

The last performance of Death of a Salesman - subject

was -  past tense of the verb <em>to be </em>

on Friday - adverbial

5. The plumber will be here soon.

The plumber - subject

will be - future tense of the verb <em>to be</em>

here - adverbial

soon - adverbial

Exercise 2

1. The taxi driver seemed like a nice man.

The taxi driver - subject

seemed - linking verb (past tense)

like a nice man - subject complement (noun phrase)

2. The inside of the bakery smells delicious.

The inside of the bakery - subject

smells - linking verb (present tense)

delicious - subject complement (adjective)

3. On that day, Francis became a criminal.

On that day - adverbial

Francis - subject

became - linking verb (past tense)

a criminal - subject complement (noun phrase)

4. It sounds like a good idea!

It - subject

sounds - linking verb (present tense)

like a good idea - subject complement (noun phrase)

5. Ms. Yeziersky became a schoolteacher.

Ms. Yeziersky - subject

became - linking verb (past tense)

a schoolteacher - subject complement (noun phrase)

In all examples, we have an equation:

subject = noun phrase (what?)

               adjective (how?)

               adverbial (when? where? how? etc.)

To define if a subject complement is a noun phrase or an adjective, we always think of the main word:

like a nice man (noun phrase because everything modifies the noun MAN)

uncommonly thrifty (<em>uncommonly</em> modifies <em>thrifty</em> so it is an adjective).

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vladimir2022 [97]

Answer:

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kodGreya [7K]

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Example: The frail girl crept through the dark, dusty hallway. Her bare feet blue from the cold, stone floors.

so i would say that the sentence you provided was using imagery :)


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