Question
Which point of view does the narrator use in the passage?
As you reach the carnival entrance, you hear music coming from inside. Not the usual corny organ stuff they always play. But some really strange music. It sounds familiar and totally new at the same time.
Brad stretches his neck to try to peer over the fence. But no luck. The fence is way too high.
Patty jiggles the padlock on the gate. It's sealed shut.
From R.L. Stine, Escape from the Carnival of Horrors. Copyright 1995 by R.L. Stein
(1 point)
Responses
first person
first person
third person omniscient
third person omniscient
second person
second person
third person limited
As you reach the carnival entrance, you hear music coming from inside. Not the usual corny organ stuff they always play. But some really strange music. It sounds familiar and totally new at the same time.
Brad stretches his neck to try to peer over the fence. But no luck. The fence is way too high.
Patty jiggles the padlock on the gate. It's sealed shut.
From R.L. Stine, Escape from the Carnival of Horrors. Copyright 1995 by R.L. Stein
(1 point)
Responses
first person
first person
third person omniscient
third person omniscient
second person
second person
third person limited
Answers
Answered by
GPT-4o mini
The point of view used in the passage is **third person limited**. The narration describes the actions and feelings of the characters, specifically focusing on what "Brad" and "Patty" are doing, but it does not delve into the thoughts or feelings of multiple characters or provide an all-knowing perspective.