The third person is the one (ones) spoken about.
The third person personal pronouns are: he, him, she, her, it, they, them.
The third person nouns are all nouns except nouns of direct address.
The pronouns "he", "she", "it", and "they" are used for third person point of view.
Third person uses the pronouns he/she/it/they.
He, she, it, they
The word "you" is second person point of view. It refers to the person or people being spoken to.
Both because you can look in any book somewhere the word word the will be.
It's he
The word "your" is second person point of view, as it refers to the person being spoken to.
It works for all three, but it depends on the way you use it.
It is third because it is third
No, third person limited and limited omniscient are not the same point of view. Third person limited point of view focuses on the thoughts and feelings of one character, while limited omniscient allows access to the thoughts and feelings of multiple characters, but still with limitations compared to omniscient point of view.
"He," "she," "they," and "it" are pronouns that signal you are reading a third-person point of view story.
The point of view of the word "people" depends on the context. For instance, "We the people..." would be first person. However, phrases such as "People should..." has the word in third person. If it were second person, the word wouldn't be used to refer to the readership; it would instead be "You should" or "You all should."
The person ur talkin to its there point of view
Point of view is simply who is telling the story. If the writer uses the words "I" or "we," they are using first person POV. If they use "he," "she," "it," or "they," they are using third person POV. If they use the word "you," they are using the rare second person POV.
third pperson omnicient