Answer: 3) The narrator is not part of the story and only states the characters' actions and speech.
Explanation: Just like pronouns: First person pronouns are I, me and my, and a first-person narrator uses those in telling the story.
Second person pronouns are you and your. Second person narration (rare) uses those.
Third person pronouns include he, she, it, him, her, they, them.
An objective third person narrator can tell only what cann be seen or heard. An omniscient narrator can reveal the thoughts and motives of the characters.
The two parts of the excerpt from Christopher Marlowe's<em> The Tragical History of Dr. Faustus</em> (1592) are "Whose deepness doth entice such forward wits/ To practise more than heavenly power permits".
These two excerpts show that <u>access to knowledge is conceived as dangerous. The word 'wits' in the first part refers to the powers of intelligent observation and keen perception that are closely related to 'unlawful things'</u>, that is, things that are not morally right. Furthermore, the phrase<u> "more than heavenly power permits"</u> in the second part<u> </u>is key to understand that, in the play, <u>higher knowledge has been forbidden since getting access to it can bring terrible consequences</u>. The entire play, whose main character sells his soul to the devil to access knowledge, warns the readers about the dangers of pursuing knowledge.
Answer:
Explanation:
I recommend that Sharoon trust her instinct when it comes to people.
The sentence above uses the verb mood in the
A.
interrogative.
B.
conditional.
C.
subjunctive.
D.
indicative.