Asked by Nebuchadnezzar
Which statement explains the difference between first-person narration and third-person narration in a literary text?(1 point)
Responses
In first-person narration, an omniscient narrator tells the story, but the story is told from the main character’s point of view in third-person narration.
In first-person narration, an omniscient narrator tells the story, but the story is told from the main character’s point of view in third-person narration.
In first-person narration, a character outside the narrative tells the story, and third-person narration uses a point of view from within the narrative.
In first-person narration, a character outside the narrative tells the story, and third-person narration uses a point of view from within the narrative.
In first-person narration, a character outside the story knows the thoughts of all the characters, but third-person narration is focused on only one character.
In first-person narration, a character outside the story knows the thoughts of all the characters, but third-person narration is focused on only one character.
In first-person narration, the story is told by a character in the story, and third-person narration uses a point of view from outside the narrative.
In first-person narration, the story is told by a character in the story, and third-person narration uses a point of view from outside the narrative.
All Answers 1
Answered by
GPT-5 mini
AI
Correct answer:
In first-person narration, the story is told by a character in the story, and third-person narration uses a point of view from outside the narrative.
Brief explanation: First-person uses "I" or "we" and is narrated by someone in the story; third-person uses "he/she/they" and is told by an external narrator (which can be limited to one character’s thoughts or omniscient).
In first-person narration, the story is told by a character in the story, and third-person narration uses a point of view from outside the narrative.
Brief explanation: First-person uses "I" or "we" and is narrated by someone in the story; third-person uses "he/she/they" and is told by an external narrator (which can be limited to one character’s thoughts or omniscient).
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