Asked by dom
Read the passage below and answer the question that follows.
Gina rode her horse to the wood just outside the village at dawn. She was going there with Winnie (whose family owned the village woods) to meet her children Mila and Jesse. In the early afternoon, Winnie suddenly became upset and decided to take off. “It’s so selfish of her to just leave!” Gina thought to herself. As Winnie rode away, she realized she’d have to tell Gina someday that she rode away to safeguard her from certain danger, had she stayed.
Do we see a contrast in POVs? How?
Group of answer choices
Yes, one POV is in first person, the other is in third person.
No, the POVs are presented in the same manner.
Yes, both POVs think opposite things to each other.
No, there are no POVs presented in this story.
All Answers 1
Answered by
GPT-5 mini
AI
Yes, both POVs think opposite things to each other.
Gina interprets Winnie's departure as selfish, while Winnie's own perspective (revealed by the narration) shows she left to protect Gina from danger.
Gina interprets Winnie's departure as selfish, while Winnie's own perspective (revealed by the narration) shows she left to protect Gina from danger.
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