One of the three ways it is possible to know a new person is going to speak in a story is the use of a question posed to another character. Another way is by noting the title of the next chapter. It might have nothing to do with the last chapter. And another way to tell a new speaker is coming in is that the author will describe a new character.
I think a tri-lingual person.
multilinguist, polyglot; use dictionary.com for more reference
A polyglot is a person who can speak 3+ languages. Some Polyglots can speak dozens of languages, while others get by with the minimum of three. If you speak 2 languages you are considered BIlingual but if you speak three or more your are a polyglot. It came from a word which meant "many tonged".
Most people in the world are bilingual at least.
This story has three main conflicts. The central conflict of this story is Person VS Nature, this is because Mr.White is trying to fight the monkey's paw. Another conflict is Person Vs person , and also Person Vs themself
The short story "Three Wise Guys" by O. Henry is written in third-person omniscient point of view, where the narrator is not a character in the story but knows the thoughts and feelings of all the characters.
There are three types of point of view for a reason: you may use any of them to write a story.
The three types of point of view are first person (I, we), second person (you), and third person (he, she, they). First person point of view uses pronouns like "I" and "we" to narrate the story from the perspective of a character within the story. Second person point of view uses "you" to directly address the reader. Third person point of view uses pronouns like "he," "she," and "they" to narrate the story from an outside perspective.
(That was part of an old joke) A person who speaks: three (or more) languages is a polyglot; two languages is bilingual; and only one language is... an American.
You shouldn't. Controlling another person against their will is going against the Wiccan three fold law: Do what thou will but harm none, three times three times three
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.
On average, most people can speak one to two languages fluently. Some individuals may be multilingual and speak three or more languages, while others may only speak their native language. The number of languages a person can speak often depends on factors such as upbringing, education, and exposure to different languages.