English, asked by 0214rochankadam29, 5 hours ago

Rewrite the
following passage in third person limited AND in third person omniscient. (Introduce a new character).
Your alarm doesn’t go off on time and you jump out of bed and trip on your book bag. When you
finally get to thebus stop you see the bus just turning the corner. You missed
it. You start walking to school and realize your shoesdon’t match. You have
on one tennis shoe and one loafer.

Answers

Answered by bhagyashreehappy123
0

One Quick Tip for Effective First Person Writing

One Quick Tip for Effective First Person Writingby Ruthanne Reid | 126 Comments

One Quick Tip for Effective First Person Writingby Ruthanne Reid | 126 CommentsThird-Person POV

One Quick Tip for Effective First Person Writingby Ruthanne Reid | 126 CommentsThird-Person POVThis means telling your story as “She did” and “He said,” never “I.” There are three kinds

One Quick Tip for Effective First Person Writingby Ruthanne Reid | 126 CommentsThird-Person POVThis means telling your story as “She did” and “He said,” never “I.” There are three kindsThis is usually reserved for instruction manuals and other non-fiction essays (like this one).

One Quick Tip for Effective First Person Writingby Ruthanne Reid | 126 CommentsThird-Person POVThis means telling your story as “She did” and “He said,” never “I.” There are three kindsThis is usually reserved for instruction manuals and other non-fiction essays (like this one).Some fiction writers can really pull this off (I’m looking at you, Choose Your Own Adventure series). I am not one of them. On we go.

One Quick Tip for Effective First Person Writingby Ruthanne Reid | 126 CommentsThird-Person POVThis means telling your story as “She did” and “He said,” never “I.” There are three kindsThis is usually reserved for instruction manuals and other non-fiction essays (like this one).Some fiction writers can really pull this off (I’m looking at you, Choose Your Own Adventure series). I am not one of them. On we go.First-person perspective generally gets split up into two types

One Quick Tip for Effective First Person Writingby Ruthanne Reid | 126 CommentsThird-Person POVThis means telling your story as “She did” and “He said,” never “I.” There are three kindsThis is usually reserved for instruction manuals and other non-fiction essays (like this one).Some fiction writers can really pull this off (I’m looking at you, Choose Your Own Adventure series). I am not one of them. On we go.First-person perspective generally gets split up into two typesThere are plenty of factors such as

One Quick Tip for Effective First Person Writingby Ruthanne Reid | 126 CommentsThird-Person POVThis means telling your story as “She did” and “He said,” never “I.” There are three kindsThis is usually reserved for instruction manuals and other non-fiction essays (like this one).Some fiction writers can really pull this off (I’m looking at you, Choose Your Own Adventure series). I am not one of them. On we go.First-person perspective generally gets split up into two typesThere are plenty of factors such asNot sure what to look for? Here it is with the filter words removed.

Similar questions