Answer:
The option which best describes the narrative voice in the excerpt is:
C. The author uses an omniscient narrator to reveal the thoughts and motivations of multiple characters.
Explanation:
By Kate Chopin, the novel "The Awakening" is narrated from <u>a third-person omniscient perspective. This type of narrator has unlimited knowledge concerning the feelings and thoughts of any of the characters.</u> In the particular passage we are analyzing here, <u>the author uses the narrator to give readers an insight of what different characters are thinking and what their motivations are.</u> We get a glimpse of Edna's excitement, of Arobin's attraction, of other people's intention to "secure the elusive but ever-desired 'tip'." Therefore, we can safely say that:
C. The author uses an omniscient narrator to reveal the thoughts and motivations of multiple characters.
8*10000+3*1000+1*00+2*10+2
<span>Although most of these answers can be true, there is still only one correct answer - dramas are meant to be read, but also heard and B. seen. In the past, playwrights have only written plays to be read by their audiences, and didn't think about the possibility of them being performed on stage. However, later, when people realized that people would enjoy to see and hear plays as well, they started to show them to them. This was the case especially because many people in the past couldn't read, but they could still enjoy watching a play.</span>