For third-person narratives, don't use the words "I" or "you."
Saying "I did this..." makes it first person.
Saying "You'll see this..." makes it second person.
Saying "It happened like this..." makes it third person.
2006-09-27 08:52:00
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answer #1
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answered by johntadams3 5
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Third Person Narrative
2016-11-02 05:32:21
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answer #2
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answered by ? 4
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3rd Person Narrative
2016-12-16 13:48:51
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answer #3
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answered by ? 4
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What about second person??? whatever happened to him?... just kidding. I tend to use a bit of both. For the most part I use third person, but when it comes to discribing things, I lean more a little toward first person.
2016-04-11 09:43:45
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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Write about what a boy named "fightoffourdemons" had to do in order to create a third person narrative for his LAB write up.
2006-09-27 08:52:04
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answer #5
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answered by Texas_Aggie95 2
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third person narrative is written by never using the word I outside of dialogue, and using he, she, "name", etc. never quite focusing on one of the characters veiws
2006-09-27 08:52:13
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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first person - I
second person - you
third person - he, she, or it.
third person narrative would go . . .
The experiment started with 3 test tubes and a liquid in each test tube.
The lab assistant added chemicals to each test tube in order for the reaction to be observed . . . .
2006-09-27 08:52:29
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answer #7
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answered by a_blue_grey_mist 7
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It's like you're watching something as it unfolds and are writing about it at the same time.
2006-09-27 08:52:00
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answer #8
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answered by Lucianna 6
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Doesn't it go like ~ "he went to the store and he saw that there were PLANT BASED MEALS available...and well he was GLAD."
vegan.20fr.com
2006-09-27 08:51:51
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answer #9
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answered by Anonymous
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The Narrator is the entity within a story that tells the story to the reader. It is one of three entities responsible for story-telling of any kind. The others are the Author and the Reader (or Audience). The Author and the Reader both inhabit the real world. It is the Author's function to create the alternate world, people, and events within the story. It is the Reader's function to understand and interpret the story. The Narrator exists within the world of the story (and only there—although in non-fiction the narrator and the author can share the same persona, since the real world and the world of the story are the same) and presents it in a way the Reader can comprehend.
The concept of the unreliable narrator (as opposed to Author) became more important with the rise of the novel in the 19th Century. Until the late 1800s, literary criticism as an academic exercise dealt solely with poetry (including epic poems like The Iliad and Paradise Lost, and poetic drama like Shakespeare). Most poems did not have a narrator distinct from the author. But novels, with their immersive fictional worlds, created a problem, especially when the narrator's views differed significantly from that of the author.
A good story must have a well-defined and consistent narrator. To this end there are several rules that govern the narrator. It* exists in the world of the story, not in the world of the Reader or the Author. The narrator is a single entity with definite attributes and limitations. The narrator cannot communicate anything it does not encounter. In other words the narrator sees the story from the point it occupies within the fictional world. This is called point of view.
help you?
2006-09-27 08:51:11
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answer #10
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answered by Anonymous
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