"Omniscient objective" is a type of third-person narrator is a written work, who describes everything pertaining to every/any character, including thoughts and feelings. This as opposed to a third-person narrator that zooms in on only one character.
No, omniscient means having complete or unlimited knowledge. It is the ability to know everything.
If you mean limited omniscient:Omniscient and Limited Omniscient Points of ViewA narrator who knows everything about all the characters is all knowing, or omniscient.A narrator whose knowledge is limited to one character, either major or minor, has a limited omniscient point of view.
Omniscient just means "all-knowing" and limited means limited knowledge. The former is a narrator that can see into everyone's head and knows what all the characters are thinking and feeling; the latter sticks with one character.
Having total knowledge; knowing everything.
This is called third-person omniscient point of view. The narrator has knowledge of the thoughts and feelings of all characters in the story.
omniscient
The opposite of an omniscient narrator is a limited or restricted narrator, where the perspective is limited to the knowledge and experiences of only one or a few characters in the story. This type of narrator can only provide insight into thoughts and feelings of specific characters, rather than knowing everything that is happening in the story.
Omniscient means having complete and unlimited knowledge. It refers to the ability to know everything, past, present, and future. In literature, an omniscient narrator is one who knows the thoughts and feelings of all characters in the story.
third person omniscient (omniscient means that we have no knowledge of the person)
A limited narrator enters the thoughts of one main character only.
A made-up category. A narrator is either omniscient or not - they can't be both.
omniscient
A third-person limited narrator has insight into only one character, while a third-person omniscient narrator has insight into all the characters.