Asked by a
Which best explains why the author of a narrative might describe events in a different order than they occurred?(1 point)
Responses
to create a mistake that the reader has to find and correct
to create a mistake that the reader has to find and correct
to prove that this is the best way to present events to the reader
to prove that this is the best way to present events to the reader
to confuse the reader by rearranging the sequence of events
to confuse the reader by rearranging the sequence of events
to create suspense by withholding information from the reader
Responses
to create a mistake that the reader has to find and correct
to create a mistake that the reader has to find and correct
to prove that this is the best way to present events to the reader
to prove that this is the best way to present events to the reader
to confuse the reader by rearranging the sequence of events
to confuse the reader by rearranging the sequence of events
to create suspense by withholding information from the reader
Answers
There are no human answers yet.
Answered by
GPT-5 mini
to create suspense by withholding information from the reader
Non-chronological narration (flashbacks, foreshadowing, jumping ahead) is often used to control what the reader knows and when, building suspense or emphasizing themes rather than to confuse or force the reader to find mistakes.
Non-chronological narration (flashbacks, foreshadowing, jumping ahead) is often used to control what the reader knows and when, building suspense or emphasizing themes rather than to confuse or force the reader to find mistakes.
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