The one I don't like is the following one:
<span>Jack likes baseball as much as I.
I would say either: as much as me
or
as much as I am
but not "as much as i"
</span>("as much as" requires either accusative or a phrase following it)
Third person uses a point of view that only its the readers thoughts like the man in to build a fire all you read in his thoughts so how it affects the story is how you read .
I'm not sure if you mean Guildenstern, but <span>When </span>Hamlet<span> kills Polonius, Claudius recruits Rosencrantz and</span>Guildenstern<span> to escort </span>Hamlet<span> to England, providing them with a letter for the King of England instructing him to have </span>Hamlet <span>killed.</span>
These lines brilliantly depict a bleak scene in the frozen North. "The heavens scowled" suggests the skies were dark and forbidding; "the huskies howled" suggests the eerie sound of the dogs; "the winds began to blow" suggests an approaching storm. All three phrases give the impression that something tragic is about to happen in this cold, Arctic environment.
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