<span>The answer choices to this question are pronouns, author bias, punctuation, and setting. The element of any store that will help the reader to best understand a story and its theme is the setting. The setting will help the reader know where the story is taking place. It can also the reader to visualize the story better in their heads. It can also help the person to immerse themselves into the story. So, the correct answer is setting.</span><span />
Answer:
The American poet Linda Pastan published "To a Daughter Leaving Home" in her 1998 collection Carnival Evening. The poem is addressed to the speaker's daughter and recounts a memory in which the speaker teaches the daughter how to ride a bike. At first, the daughter tries to find her balance while the speaker remains by her side. Soon enough, though, the daughter zooms away, terrifying the speaker in the process. The speaker quickly sees how happy and thrilled the daughter is to be riding a bike on her own, however, and in this way the poem spotlights both the anxieties and joys of parenthood
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<span>A. The snowflake seems uncertain and hesitant.</span>
The correct answer here is the third one: Limited omniscient. We know this because a narrator who knows everything about all the characters is all knowing, or omniscient and a narrator whose knowledge is limited to one character, either major or minor, has a limited omniscient point of view.This text is a perfect example of an omniscient limited. I hope this helps