Third person point of view is used in many literary works.
A few examples are:
The Metamorphosis
The Harry Potter series
Slaughterhouse-Five
alternating chapters in In the Time of the Butterflies
Brave New World
The Wizard of Oz
Any book that doesn't say "I" or "me" or references themselves in any way, but just watches from the shadows.
First person=I, we, us
Second person=you
Third person=They, she, he, them
I, me, and myself are examples of first person pronouns; you is second person pronoun; he, she, or someone are all examples of third person pronouns.Matt and Paul went home. (any sentence that does not use i, my,etc)
the outsiders is in 1st person not 3rd
Most books are written in third person point of view. It's the most common POV. Pick up any book and it'll probably be third person.
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.
Most 19th Century "classic" literature is written in this POV. Some more modern examples include The Secret Garden and The Lord of the Rings.
All of the pronouns that are third person plural are:theythemtheirstheirthemselvesthesethosebothfewfewermanyothersseveralThe following pronouns can be singular or plural:allanymoremostnonesomesuch
The three types of 'point of view' pronouns are: First person: I, me, my, mine, we, us, our, ours. Second person: you, your, yours. Third person: he, him, his, she, her, hers, they, them, their, theirs, it, its.
The types of pronouns, whether nominative, objective or possessive, are first, second and third person, singular and plural, masculine, feminine and neutral. Nominative first person singular: I Nominative first person plural: we Second person: you Nominative third person singular masculine: he Nominative third person singular feminine: she Nominative third person singular neutral: it Nominative third person plural: they
In the movie "The Shawshank Redemption," the story is predominantly told from the third-person limited perspective of the character Andy Dufresne. Another example is "The Godfather," where the audience sees the events unfold from the limited viewpoint of Michael Corleone.
All of them. You've asked for examples of every single point of view, so all stories would fit into one category or another. You should ask ONE question at a time to get a good answer.
No, the word "some" can be used in both the third person and other persons. It is not limited to a specific grammatical person.
It's from the point ofview of a man that is in the wilderness trying to get to his logging community. I think at some point it switches to the dog though.