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Which narrative point of view is used in “A Bad Start to a Good Morning,” and how does the author develop it?
A. third-person limited; developed when Jason says I to report his thoughts
B. third-person omniscient; developed when the teacher says you to Jason
C. third-person limited; developed by directly sharing only Jason’s feelings
D. third-person omniscient; developed by directly sharing the feelings of all characters
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C. third-person limited; developed by directly sharing only Jason’s feelings.
Explanation: The narrator uses third-person pronouns but gives access only to Jason’s internal thoughts and emotions, not the inner lives of other characters. That selective focus is the hallmark of third-person limited. The other choices are wrong because “I” would be first person, “you” is second person/address, and omniscient would reveal multiple characters’ thoughts.
Explanation: The narrator uses third-person pronouns but gives access only to Jason’s internal thoughts and emotions, not the inner lives of other characters. That selective focus is the hallmark of third-person limited. The other choices are wrong because “I” would be first person, “you” is second person/address, and omniscient would reveal multiple characters’ thoughts.
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