There's no such animal. A narrator either knows everything (omniscient) or not. They can't be both.
A limited omniscient narrator knows only information about other characters, not the thoughts or feelings of all characters. They have restricted access to the inner lives of characters, allowing readers to gain insight into the story from a particular character's perspective.
If the narrator knows anything about other characters, it's an omniscient narrator.
Limited
An omniscient narrator would be able to tell readers about what other characters think and do, providing insights into the minds and actions of multiple characters throughout the story. This narrator has a broad perspective and can share information that is not limited to the perspective of just one character.
The omniscient narrator is the one who mostly talks about other characters' experiences in a story. This narrator has a broader perspective and insight into the thoughts and emotions of multiple characters in the story. It provides a more comprehensive view of the events and characters in a narrative.
A narrator that is only able to narrate those things he or she experiences firsthand, having no direct knowledge of other characters' thoughts only able to peer into the mind of one character. knows what only one character in the story knows, sees, or thinks:
a third-person narrator
An omniscient narrator
omniscient narrator
A third person omniscient narrator knows everything about all characters and events in the story, providing insight into multiple perspectives. In contrast, a third person limited narrator only reveals the thoughts and feelings of one character, offering a more focused and restricted viewpoint.
The narrator might not be aware of the thoughts or actions of other characters.
The narrator might not be aware of the thoughts or actions of other characters.
An omniscient narrator is one who knows the thoughts, feelings, and motivations of all characters in a story. Clues that the narrator is omniscient include access to the inner thoughts of multiple characters, knowledge of events happening simultaneously in different locations, and the ability to provide information that no single character could know.
The other characters' views and thoughts are left out.
The narrator is not in the story, but knows what the characters are thinking.In narrative texts, the third person omniscient narrator is often the person/entity from who's viewpoint the story is told. They are not a character in the text, and nor is the reader exposed to any aspect of their personality or other attributes.The third person omniscient narrator is 'omniscient'; this means that they know every possible fact within and without the text (including the thoughts and emotions of characters). This allows many different viewpoints and perspectives to be presented to the reader in a text. Using the third person omniscient narrator allows authors to reveal details in the way that best suits their plans for the text, without a character in the text actually experiencing or knowing something themselves.