The word would be dependent on the prologue for which work you are referring to. A narrator can be speaking in the first, second, or third person; a narrator could be male or female, singular or plural.
You should ask your question again using the name of the story or narrative.
untrust worthy
narrator
the narrator thinks this man does not realize his own family
Pericardial region, or the mediastinum.
Small best describes a worm hole.
By seeming to be insane, the narrator convinces the reader that the murder could have been made for something as trivial as the landlord's eye; that the narrator could have cut up and hid the body and that he could have actually heard the sound of a dead heart beating under the floorboards. In other words, such strange and incredible occurrences were the result of a deranged mind.
Simplicity best describes the general trend in 20th century architecture.
Which answer choice best describes the narrator of the Drive in movies
The word "mad" or "insane" could be used to describe the narrator at the end of "The Tell-Tale Heart" as his paranoia and guilt over the murder drive him to confess in a frenzied and delusional manner.
The narrator describes their father as being strict, disciplinarian, and often distant.
Silent best describes the jungle scene as Marlow describes it at the beginning of the excerpt in Heart of Darkness.
B
B
Unattractive
Love - apex
It is peacefully exploring a nearby field.
The word "obsessed" best describes the narrator's opinion towards Captain Ahab in "Moby Dick." The narrator portrays Ahab as consumed by his quest for revenge against the white whale, resulting in a single-minded fixation that drives him to extremes.
it moves toward the heart <apex>
"The Tell-Tale Heart" appears to be told from a first-person point of view, as the narrator directly addresses the reader throughout the story. This perspective allows the reader to gain insight into the thoughts and emotions of the unreliable narrator as he unfolds the chilling tale of murder.