Answer:
Third person omniscient
Explanation:
I'll go over the different types of point of views.
Third person limited is when the narrator talks in third person- using words like he, she to describe all of the characters- but only has access to one character's thoughts and feelings. This is not the answer, as the question wanted a pov with access to thoughts and feelings to every character.
Third person omniscient is when the narrator has access to every character's thoughts, feelings, and actions. This is the right answer.
Third person objective is when the narrator describes what is happening to all of the characters but not their feelings. This is not the right answer.
First person is when the narrator is one of the characters in the story. The narrator only has access to their own thoughts, feelings, and actions and not others, so this is not the right answer.
The correct answer is third person omniscient. In this pov, the narrator has access to all of the characters' thoughts, feelings, and actions.
Answer:
Explanation:
For example, the father wanted to go on the show bowling for dollars so he joined a bowling league in hopes of becoming rich. The enjoyed watching the sonny and cher variety hour in hopes of stardom.excerpt from the book:
Unwilling to abandon his champagne wishes and caviar dreams, my father dreamed of ways to get rich
The big day finally arrived and my father was ready to strike it rich. He filled the Impala with gas and set off for the third and final drive to the studio. We waited anxiously at home.
My father returned that night looking sadder than I had ever seen him. In his two tries, he had hit a total of only seven pins, winning seven dollars. He had never before bowled so poorly. He blamed his poor performance on everything from the lights to the long drive. We didn’t care why he hadn’t won; we just could
Funny in Farsi 15 16 FIROOZEH DUMAS not recall anybody winning so little on Bowling for Dollars. My father had spent several times as much on gasoline just driving back and forth to the studio.
When the performance was aired a few weeks after the taping, we watched in silence. My father looked very nervous on televi- sion, especially after he hit his first gutter ball. After the second gutter ball, he looked positively panicked.
After this brush with fame, we no longer watched Bowling for Dollars.We didn’t feel the same emotional involvement. Who were we to criticize these people, all of whom managed to win more than seven dollars? Shortly thereafter, my father gave up bowling entirely, decid- ing it was a stupid sport, if one could even call it a sport. More important, his Wednesday evening bowling nights had forced him to missThe Sonny and Cher Comedy Hour. Now he was able to squeeze onto the sofa with the rest of us and catch up.
Answer:Bob, Rotary Club,Vietnam
Explanation:
The inflection is -----Past tense.
The subject matter is in the poem's title. Their is a resentful mood although it's not plainly stated that the author resented her mother. Her mother's house represents the attitude of her mother; the walls stood at attention, the air knew to hold its breath, the polished floor defied heel marks... The personification is plain in these opening observations and, given the subject matter, it seems plain that these are reflections of the author's mother. It would seem that her mother is very commanding, superior, serious. Two lines I think are very telling:
"crinkled in discomfort
in my mother's house"
It's not been named a childhood home, rather she's in (imagine italics) Her Mother's House.