because the narrator knows everything that is happening
Third person POV uses the words "he," "she," "it," or "they."
One way to create a never-ending story is to have the narrator's job be to tell stories about people who tell stories. At the end of each story, the narrator introduces a storyteller. Each time the narrator should use the same words, such as "That reminds me of a story . . . " That way, even when you reach the end, the narrator can say, "That reminds me of a story. . . ."
If you don't understand something like a story, the narrator would be there to explain to you what is going on in the story.
The narrator in "To Kill a Mockingbird" uses the literary device of first-person point of view, where the story is narrated by a character within the story itself, namely Scout Finch. This allows the reader to experience events and emotions through Scout's perspective and provides insight into her thoughts and feelings.
The use of first-person point of view in Edgar Allan Poe's "The Tell-Tale Heart" immerses the reader in the narrator's disturbed psyche, creating a sense of intimacy and immediacy. This perspective allows readers to experience the narrator's intense emotions and irrational thoughts, blurring the line between sanity and madness. It also generates suspense and tension as the audience grapples with the reliability of the narrator. Ultimately, this perspective deepens the horror of the story by making the reader complicit in the narrator's chilling experience.
his nutsack
Amy Tan uses the first person narration when she wrote the story 'Two Kinds".
In the story "The Tell-Tale Heart" by Edgar Allan Poe, the pronouns used include "I," "my," "me," and "he." The narrator uses these pronouns to describe his own thoughts, actions, and feelings, as well as those of the old man he ultimately murders. The use of these pronouns helps create a sense of intimacy and psychological intensity in the narrative.
suspense and tension
The first person is when the narrator is the one telling the story. Tell tale signs of first person are the use of I, me, and myself. Third person limited is when the narrator is none of the characters and instead tells the reader the story through the eyes of many of the characters, however the information from this narrator is limited, hence the name. Third person omniscient on the other hand is "all knowing"
The main character uses the pronouns I and my.
Usually a character in the story. Sometimes also referred to as an autobiographer if they are writing a book (an autobiography) about themselves and their life, and sometimes a "narrator" when reading the story aloud in the first person.