You can, but it's harder for the reader if you switch back and forth, so most authors keep one viewpoint.
first person last and third
First-person point of view.
If you're writing the story, you can do whatever you want. However, reviewers (or teachers) also have the option to ding you for it if they want.
maybe you are referring to first and third person. if so then the first person point of view is where the narrator is taking part or is a part of the story. the third person point of view is when the speaker is not taking any part in the story. i hope i answered your question. if not I'm sorry about that.
First person uses the pronouns I or we or our.
If you can imagine two individuals talking to each other, the "first person" is the person speaking ("I/we"). The "second person" is the person listening ("you"). The "third person" is someone not involved in the communication ("he/she/they"). The first person narrator is a participant in the story. The third person narrator details the story of someone not included in the speaker/listener or writer/reader relationship. The second person narrator would be telling a story that occurred to the reader/listener. It remains to be seen how this can be done to tell a story.
The word 'has' is not a pronoun. The word 'has' is a verb, the third person singular present of' have'. Examples: first person singular: I have some change. third person singular: He has some change. She has some change. It has no change.
This is a request to narrate a story from either the first-person, second-person, or third-person point of view. Each perspective offers a different way of presenting the story, providing a unique lens through which the events can be described.
Third peron ^___^
The perspective is third person when the story is told using "he." This means that the narrator is not a character in the story and is describing the events from an external point of view.
Third person limited is a narrative structure in which the reader sees events through the eyes of one character in the story, though not necessarily the narrator of the story (like a first person narrative is).
The perspective a story is told from is usually referred to as "point of view." Typical points of view include first person, third person limited, and third person omniscent.