The Adventures of Tom Sawyer is typically told from a third person limited point of view, where the narrator only knows and conveys the thoughts and feelings of Tom Sawyer, not every character in the story.
omniscient
the narrator of "teh adventures of tom sawyer" was told in the third person.
The narrator in "The Adventures of Tom Sawyer" is an omniscient third-person narrator who observes and recounts the events involving Tom Sawyer. This narrator provides insights into Tom's thoughts, feelings, and actions throughout the story.
A third-person limited narrator has insight into only one character, while a third-person omniscient narrator has insight into all the characters.
A made-up category. A narrator is either omniscient or not - they can't be both.
Third person (limited omniscient).
limited omniscient and third person limited narrative.
A third-person limited narrator focuses on the thoughts and experiences of one character, while a third-person omniscient narrator can access the thoughts and experiences of multiple characters. The limited narrator provides a narrower perspective, while the omniscient narrator offers a broader view of the story.
An outside narrator is third person omniscient.
A limited narrator enters the thoughts of one main character only.
The third person limited point of view and the third person omniscient are two different points of views. The third person limited is simply the point of view from one character in a story. Just like the first person point of view, they can only tell the story from a realistic observation point. What makes them different from the first person is that while first person speaks with "I" and "my" pronouns, third person will speak with "he" and "she" pronouns. So, their points of view is limited or subjected to what they observe. The third person omniscient has a type of "godly" view of everything, hence the word "omniscient." They know all that is happening, all that is in the head and feelings of the characters, and even more than the main character. They tell the story with all details that are not even known to the characters in the book.
The two types of third-person points of view are limited or omniscient. Limited third-person point of view focuses on the thoughts and feelings of one character, while omniscient third-person point of view provides insight into the thoughts and feelings of multiple characters.