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The point of view is third person.
you get the radio card in the radio tower in goldenrod city,talk to the third lady on the first floor and she ask for you some answers and at the end of the questionaire the lady gives you the radio card.
Anne of Green Gables is told from a third-person point of view.
fudge balls
third person
You may narrate it in any viewpoint you wish. Most authors use third person because first and third are quite tricky to write properly.
for all you wiki dumb mofo's.... it's third person limited
Shelley uses a third person point of view to narrate the clouds' activity in "The Cloud." This gives the reader a more detached and objective perspective on the clouds' movements and interactions.
You can use any narrative viewpoint you want to use -- most authors use third person because first and third are quite tricky to write properly.
the third -person limitted
This is a request to narrate a story from either the first-person, second-person, or third-person point of view. Each perspective offers a different way of presenting the story, providing a unique lens through which the events can be described.
The choice of narrative voice in storytelling refers to the perspective from which the story is told, such as first person, second person, or third person. This choice impacts the reader's experience and the level of intimacy they feel with the characters and events in the story.
You can win the radio in the Goldenrod City radio tower by answering 5 questions to the lady at the front desk on the first floor (the third person over).
Answer it yourself. That is why we have Internet So you can research and learn.
In the book "Pictures of Hollis Woods," the third person point of view is used to narrate the story. This means that the narrator is outside of the story and refers to the characters by their names or pronouns like "he" or "she." This allows the reader to see the events from a perspective separate from any one character.
Writing in third person involves using pronouns like "he," "she," "they," or a character's name to refer to the characters in a story. This perspective allows the writer to narrate the events from an outside point of view, providing objectivity and a broader perspective on the characters and story. It is commonly used in fiction, academic writing, and journalism.
Omniscient limited, or third person limited, point of view is a way to narrate a story. In the omniscient limited point of view, the narrator knows the thoughts, feelings, and actions of one character, but the story is told in the third person.