<span>Near beginning of life on Earth, Shen Nong, who was the Lord of the Wind, made many journeys over our world. I would say this is an example of a myth talking about 'near the beginning of life on Earth, that Shen Nong was even in existence then (since early primitive life did not co-exist with man) and also that he was "Lord of the Wind" which sounds like a mythical name perhaps bestowing powers to do with the wind.</span>
A framed story such as 1001 Nights has one narrative.
The main idea of this excerpt is the fact that the Grimm Brothers had a strong belief (that the most natural and pure forms of culture were linguistic and based in history) and in following it, they <em>saved</em> the fairy tale. In order to do so, the author gives a supporting detail and reveals the main idea, followed by more details.
I want to say it will be first-person. Third-person is an outside voice, someone that is not a character in the plot. It seems as if the narrator is talking about himself, which is why I deduce it to being a first-person point of view.
Why would a parent let their child play a dangerous sport if they don’t even know the outcome of what could happen.
Playing dangerous sports at a young age is extremely dangerous for teenagers because their brains haven’t developed fully yet.
A parent would feel terrible if there child got injured from a dangerous sport knowing that they could have prevented it.