The narrator - the person who is talking - will identify themselves to the reader in several ways. They might just come right out and name themselves. They might also show who they are by the way other characters talk to them and about them. If you can't figure out which character is talking, you're probably looking at omniscient point of view, where an anonymous "camera" is recording all of the action.
First, you must specify the name of this story that you are talking about, and the author's first and last name, or else no one will know what you're talking about.
I don't know if your talking about Jaspers story if so its in Eclipse
Talking story in Hawaiian is pronounced as "kāhea ka moʻolelo."
You don't have to make a title for your stories -- it helps you and the reader to know what story they're talking about, though. Plus, if the reader wants to recommend the story to somebody, it helps them find that story.
I don't even know what you are talking about you fat guy
I know what I am talking about.
Winnie Foster was talking to a toad.
Jiminy Cricket was the talking cricket from the popular story, Pinocchio (1940).
We don't know since we don't know what writing/book your talking about.
if you talking about writing a story then it depands on the story type.
jane is not an animal! Jane is the daughter of Wendy in the story! Unless your talking about when she's with the lost boys............................I don't know.
If the book has magical talking whales, that's your first clue. If the story didn't really occur, it's probably fictional.