A neighbor capturing ducks
the song came from the musical Rainmaker. I do not remember the writter but the cowboys were "standing on the corner, watching all the girls go by...standing on the corner, giving all the girls the eye.": Rainmaker Musical
I do not know but what i do no is i am standing behind you watching and waiting.................................................
The author ("omniscient narrator").sounds like Morgan Freeman, but on a recent interview, he stated that he was God, so probably not right...
A sentence is a complete thought with a noun and verb.A sentence fragment is just part of a sentence and does not make a complete thought.The above are sentences.Here are some fragments that make no sense:the sentence fragment?what is?your answer in a complete sentencethe boy who lived down the streetbecause he had to go home
A car when your standing still and watching it go down a highway.
In "Their Eyes Were Watching God," the narrator characterizes the darkness in Janie and Phoebe's eyes as a sense of preoccupation or heaviness due to their life experiences and burdens. It symbolizes the struggles they face and the weight of their emotions, reflecting their internal complexities and inner conflicts.
The narrator is the one speaking. You tell who the narrator is by paying attention to what the other characters say and do toward the narrator. Sometimes the narrator is not a character in the story at all, but is more like a camera or someone else watching the action - that's called third-person narration and is very common in fiction stories.
Does anything happen to the narrator? Then they are within the story. If they sound as though they're watching everything from their window, or on a TV screen, they're not within the story.
Yes I have, a man standing watching me in the room.
A large group of people standing together in one place. Such as in a sports stadium watching football.
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.