That depends on whether you think describing your own story is narrating it. Also, sometimes if it's in third person, describing whats happening and also what different people are thinking, which could be counted as narration or not. It really depends on how you think of narration. If you don't want to decide, then my answer would be yes.
the narrator is the person (or animal) that is telling the story. The author writes the story, but the story is told by the narrator.
the narrator is in prison for the first time.
The narrator in "The Ones Who Walk Away from Omelas" is an unidentified voice that presents the story to the reader in a detached and descriptive manner. The narrator serves as a vehicle to convey the events and moral dilemma presented in the story.
This is a framed story- the narrator of the frame story is the Hebrew teacher & the secretary is the narrator of the framed story.
The narrator is the voice that tells the story, while the author is the creator of the story. The narrator can be a character in the story or an unseen observer, while the author is the individual who actually wrote the story.
No, a narrator is a storyteller.
if you are smart you should know that its levy, like seriously wath dimwit would think its jacob
The narrator of "The Westing Game" is Samuel Westing. -DCB
The narrator of the story "The Man of the House" is an omniscient third-person narrator. This means that the narrator is not a character in the story, but rather an outside observer who knows and sees everything happening in the story.
The narrator is the voice that tells the story. The narrator's relationship to the story depends on the particular story. The narrator can be the main character in the story, an important character, a minor character, or someone who is not in the story at all. The choice of narrator is a major factor in setting the tone of the story. The writer may choose to tell his story as if one friend is telling another a story or a parent is telling a bedtime story to his child, The narrator could be the village elder passing along a tribal legend or a felon trying to explain what happened to the police. The choices are limitless. The character and attitude of the narrator color and limit the story. We see and hear only what the narrator sees and hears and chooses to tell us. The narrator may love, hate, admire, envy, or be confused by the characters in the story. Whatever the narrator feels will influence his version of the story -- which may or may not be the truth of what happened. If the narrator is a child, he may relate events that he himself does not understand. The narrator may not know all the facts and may misunderstand what is going on. The narrator can exaggerate, leave things out, or just plain lie as he tells his story. Where the narrator is telling the story helps set the mood of the story. A story can be told over drinks at a bar, in a prison, at a country club, over a campfire, or on a cross-country journey. When choosing a narrator, writers try to pick the person who can best tell the story and make the reader feel what he wants them to feel.
The character in the story is a first-person narrator, as they are telling the story from their own perspective using "I" and "me."
The narrator might be mistaken or biased about elements of the story