First person narration is where the person is "speaking" directly to the reader, using pronouns such as "I" or "we." This is a very limited viewpoint because you only know what the narrator knows - you cannot "see" what's going on elsewhere, for example, or know what other people are thinking (unless your narrator is a telepath).
A narration within a narration is called a "nested narration" or a "frame narrative". This is a storytelling technique where one story is told within another story.
The other characters' views and thoughts are left out.
First-person narration: The story is told from the perspective of a character within the story, using "I" or "we" pronouns. Third-person limited narration: The story is told from an external perspective, focusing on the thoughts and feelings of one character. Third-person omniscient narration: The story is told from an external perspective that knows all characters' thoughts and feelings.
When characters speak within a story, it is known as "dialogue." When a character tells a story, it is called "narration."
Narrator who reveals to the readers that the story is a fabrication and who comments within the text on the story telling process, in-order to emphasize the gap between friction and reality
a person involved in the story.
the story open window has a third person style of narration since the pronouns used in the story are he, she , they etc...
in the grassfield
well if the narration uses the letter I
One limitation of first person narration is that it limits the reader's perspective to only what the narrator knows or experiences, potentially missing out on other characters' insights or plot developments. Additionally, the reliability of the narrator can be questioned, as their biases or subjective viewpoint may influence the reader's interpretation of events.
Ways a story is told.
The point of view where a voice outside of the work tells the story is known as third-person narration. This type of narration is common in literature and allows the narrator to provide an external perspective on the events and characters within the story without being a part of it.