A story has to have a protagonist.
You can tell by how the character is written. Behavior of a character will tell you along with the authors description.
Yes, a narrator can be a protagonist, antagonist, or a neutral observer in a story. The role of the narrator is to tell the story, and their perspective can greatly influence how the readers perceive the characters and events in the narrative.
The protagonist is the hero of the story, the person the story is about. His opponent is the "antagonist", the villain of the story.
The narrator... Bonaparte is the protagonist of the story
the protagonist in the story crime on mars is
protagonist
The deuteragonist is the second main character in a story, behind the protagonist. The deuteragonist can be with or opposed to the protagonist or have his/her own parallel story to the protagonist.
Yes, "protagonist" is a noun. It refers to the main character in a literary work or story.
feel bad
The protagonist in Rudyard Kipling's "The Finest Story in the World" is Mr. John Lockwood Kipling, who narrates the story to the protagonist, unnamed.
The protagonist in the story was Doug Spaulding because the whole story was based on him.
The servant of a merchant is the protagonist.