depends on your skills in the both, personally I like reading when the author uses a third person view, but if the story is going about a person or a persons life, there is somewhat a better way of understanding him when you write first person.
First person point of view is when the narrator is a character in the story and refers to themselves as "I" or "we." Third person point of view is when the narrator is not a character in the story and refers to characters as "he," "she," or "they."
1st person uses words like "I" and "we". In writing, it makes the view more limited; the reader only sees what the I/we sees/see.
First person:
"I went to the market yesterday, and smelled a peculiar spice I couldn't identify."
3rd person uses words like "he" and "they" and avoids saying "I" or "we". Creates a space between the reader and the narration. Can be a limited view, only showing what the "he" sees or it can be omniscient (all-knowing) and describe all that is going on around the "he".
Third person limited:
"Clara walked through the marketplace, and the aroma of spices surrounded her, pleasant, though she couldn't identify them."
Third person omniscient:
"Clara walked through the marketplace, vendors eying her as a potential customer and some admiring or envying her fine clothes. A scent tickled her senses, though she could not identify it. It was saffron from the stall she'd passed a few steps before where a man sat cross-legged on a straw mat, twirling a bit of straw in his hand and keeping a close eye on his precious spices."
It depends it will be first person if it is a diary but generally stories are in third person which is watching on at what happens.
First person point of view is from YOUR own perspective, ie "I did this"
Third person is as if you are standing outside and describing what you see ie "The man ran fast"
It can be both, a narrator is someone who talks you through the book and describes whats happening, it can either be 1st or 3rd.
The narrator is 3rd point of view
First-person point of view.
It is written in first person, Bella Swan's point of view, for the first third. Then for the second third, it is written in first person, Jacob Black's point of view. Finally, the last third is written in first person, Bella Swan's point of view.
They is third, but you is first and second
first person last and third
A first person point of view would be "I, me, my," and such. Second person would be "you." And finally, third person would be "he, her, she, him, her," and such. Hope this helps:)
1.First person point of view 2.Second person point of view 3.Third person:Objective 4.Third person:Limited 5.Third person:Omniscient
In "The Prince and the Pauper," the first person point of view is not utilized. Instead, the story is told in the third person omniscient point of view, where the narrator knows the thoughts and feelings of multiple characters.
Subject can be any person point of view, depending on who or what is being discussed in the context of a sentence. First person point of view represents the speaker or writer (I, we), second person represents the person being spoken to (you), and third person represents others being spoken about (he, she, they).
Point of view is what it is called.
"Godfather Death" is written in third-person point of view.
The point of view is third person.
Yes, the third person point of view is when the narrator is telling the story from an outsider's perspective using pronouns like "he," "she," or "they" to refer to characters. This allows for a more objective and distant view of the events taking place.