Because the narrator can be fooled or can try to fool the reader.
readers know the thoughts and feelings of a first-person narrator
a third person narrator gives an author the greatest flexibility and thus is most commonly used. Characters are referred to as ' he, she or it' and never as 'I, we or you' which represent first and second person Apex: doesn't talk about his or her own experiences, but talks about others'.
False. In literature, the narrator can be a character in the story (first-person narrator) or an outside observer (third-person narrator).
First person uses the pronouns I or we or our.
In first-person narration the narrator is usually a participant in the story's action.
First person narrator
The first person narrator can only narrate what he or she knows. You see the story from their viewpoint.
first person narrator and third person narrator
what type of narrator is the person who uses the pronoun I
The narrator of the story in "A Bend in the Road" by Nicholas Sparks is an unnamed omniscient third-person narrator. They provide insight into multiple characters' thoughts, feelings, and actions throughout the novel.
I, my
I, my