Third person, and if the narrator is all-knowing like GOD then it would be called an omniscient narrator; if the narrator does not know all of the character's thoughts, feelings, or completely understands situations then that is a third person limited narrator.
1st person
A character that never changes his point of view in a story is often referred to as a static character. This type of character remains consistent in their beliefs, values, and personality throughout the narrative, providing a stable reference point for the other characters to interact with and react to.
The term for the point of view in which the narrator is a character in the story is called first-person point of view.
The author's feelings about a character or situation in a story are referred to as the author's perspective or point of view.
A Character's Point of view is based on the character's well...POINT OF VIEW! Like instead of an author saying "Mary walked down the hallway, her light brown slapping her back' <----- See? But if it was in the character's Point Of View It would be like "I walked down the hallway, feeling my hair pat my back slowly in a rhythm" See? That's what it means "The character Point of view"
1. The point of view is 3rd person omniscient, as the narrator shifts focus from character to character.
second-person point of view (example: "You hear a strange noise, and you move to open the large door.")
Point of view or POV is a director's instruction to film a story from the point of view of a character, a group of characters or from the audience's point of view.
To explain how the character is feeling. If a novel didn't say what the character's point of view was then it would be really boring!
The Point of View of the story is a Third-Person Point of View (Omniscient). She can see into each character's mind and observe what they are doing. The narrator exists beyond the plot, and she refers to the characters by name or as he, she, and them.
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