First you must know what a pronoun is.. here are some examples:
I, me, he, she, herself, you, it, that, they, each, few, many, who, whoever, whose, someone, everyone, etc.
In this sentence you see only one pronoun, at the end of the sentence, "hers."
You may already know this, but possessive means "in possession of" and the word "hers" in this sentence means that she is in possession of the pasta with the grilled chicken on it.
I hope I helped! (:
If I were friends with Romeo or Juliet I would tell them how I see it and how I see their relationship ending. I would inform them that it’s not the brightest idea, I would tell them not to rush things and maybe take it a little slower. I would tell them to wait until they were older to make decisions for themselves, and I would tell them to be patient with life.
It can identify(if you know who is narrating) to tell you if you are in third person or first person or it can identify who is the narrator if you know what person you are writing in. The second person should never be used in a narrative essay. That would be informal and incorrect. You can also identify when it is taking place in some cases............. I don't know if this helped but I tried
D. is the answer hope this helps
narrator ADDRESSES the reader - first-person
narrator is detached observer WITHOUT complete knowledge - third-person
narrator who is a PARTICIPANT with LIMITED knowledge - second-person
I capitalized some words so that you can tie the definition with the term.