Penny pedaled her bike as quickly as she could, but she couldn't seem to build up enough speed. She started rolling down the hill. "I can't do it," she thought to herself. Her friend Melissa was riding behind her. "Keep trying! Stand up on your pedals. You can do it!" Melissa shouted. Penny decided to take her advice. She stood up on the pedals and put all of her weight into the climb. She started going up the hill. This made Penny very happy. "Thanks Melissa!" she said as she got to the top of the hill. Melissa smiled and said, "What are friends for?" Narrator's Perspective:

Respuesta :

This question is incomplete. Here's the complete question.

Penny pedaled her bike as quickly as she could, but she couldn't seem to build up enough speed. She started rolling down the hill. "I can't do it," she thought to herself. Her friend Melissa was riding behind her. "Keep trying! Stand up on your pedals. You can do it!" Melissa shouted. Penny decided to take her advice. She stood up on the pedals and put all of her weight into the climb. She started going up the hill. This made Penny very happy. "Thanks Melissa!" she said as she got to the top of the hill. Melissa smiled and said, "What are friends for?"

Narrator's Perspective:

first-person

second-person

third-person objective

third-person limited

third-person omniscient

Answer:

third-person limited

Explanation:

The point of view of the narrator in a story can be:

First-person: the narrator is the character in the story through whose eyes the reader sees the action.

Second-person: the story is told from the perspective of "you."

Third-person: the narrator is telling the story from outside of the action, not being part of it.

Third-Person Objective: the narrator tells the story only based on what he sees and hears, without any references to the thoughts of the characters.

Third-person limited: the narrator describes the thoughts and feelings of one character, who might be the main character but not the one who´s telling the story (Penny, in this example)

Third-person omniscient: the narrator can describe every character's thoughts and feelings.