he hears the beating of the dead mans heart
if you are smart you should know that its levy, like seriously wath dimwit would think its jacob
omniscient; limited
his nutsack
To provide the reader with a way to understnad the story better.
The narrator tells the story, but it is the reader who controls how events are imagined. The narrator's point of view determines the sequence of events. The narrator must know what all characters think at all times. The narrative will change depending on the narrator's tone and point of view.
You need a different narrator depending on your theme. If you're telling an emotional tale with lots of introspection, you'd want a first-person narrator. If you're telling an action story, you'd want a third-person narrator - and depending on what your theme is, you'd pick the character best able to get that theme across to the readers. In other words, it depends on what you're trying to say to the readers.
the police officers don't belive the real story because they think shee is a lonitic and saw the secerity camaras
do u know da wei
An omniscient narrator would be able to tell readers about what other characters think and do, providing insights into the minds and actions of multiple characters throughout the story. This narrator has a broad perspective and can share information that is not limited to the perspective of just one character.
Yes. If you think of the narrator as a person, the narrator is like an omniscient being who is watching the events in the village. The author has written dialogue for the author, but is not the narrator himself.
The third-person objective narrator describes only the actions and events in a story without delving into the thoughts or feelings of characters. This narrator remains impartial and sticks to reporting what is observable.
Important questions you can ask about the narrator and tone in Things Fall Apart by Chinua Achebe to think about Achebe's beliefs perspectives and assumptions, or to review any other book or story include:Who is the narrator?What are the narrator/author's beliefs, perspectives, and assumptions? Do these seem authentic? Justifiable given the narrator/author's story?Why did the narrator/author choose the particular voice used primarily in the story?How would you describe the tone?What is the narrator/author purpose in using that specific tone?Does the tone change; if so, where in the story does it change and why?How does the tone enhance the story being told?