The pronouns are:
I = first person, singular, subjective
me = first person, singular, objective
we = first person, plural, subjective (us = first person, plural, objective)
The first person is the point of view of the speaker, the person telling the story.
First-person point of view.
First person
This is third person point of view.
First person point of view is used when narrators tell stories from their own perspectives using "I," "me," "we," or "my." This allows readers to see events and experiences through the narrator's eyes.
Point of view is what it is called.
1st point of view or narrators point of view
By using multiple narrators
The beginning
Vantage Point
By using multiple narrators
"In a Grove" is written in a multiple perspectives point of view, where the same event is recounted from different characters' perspectives. Each character provides their own version of events, resulting in varying accounts and perspectives on the truth of what happened in the grove.
One key point to interaction perspective is that the different people involved in the interactions will all have different perspectives. Another point to remember is that the perspectives are usually dependent on the backgrounds and experiences of the individuals involve. The third point to keep in mind is that through the interaction itself, the perspectives will be altered.
Point of view
It is called shifting narrative perspectives or multiple viewpoint storytelling. This technique allows the reader to see events from different characters' viewpoints in the same scene or chapter.