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    • Third Person: Explanation and Examples - Grammar Monster
      • A third-person narrative is a story told using the pronouns "he," "she," "it," or "they" or using nouns. In other words, the story is not told from a personal perspective. A third-person narrative contrasts with a first-person narrative, which is a story told from a personal perspective using the pronoun "I" (and sometimes "we").
      www.grammar-monster.com/glossary/third_person.htm
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  2. Third person definition: third person indicates a third party individual other than the speaker. What is the difference Between First Person, Second Person, and Third Person? First, second, and third person refer to pronouns and their verb forms.

  3. The third person includes anyone or anything else other than I, me, us, or you. It is represented by the words “he,” “she,” and “it” in the singular and “they” and “them” in the plural.

  4. Oct 29, 2022 · A pronoun is a word that we use to substitute for nouns when it’s already clear what’s being referenced. Besides avoiding repetitiveness, pronouns make communication clearer and much more efficient. Some common pronouns are— I. me. she. us. you. themselves. who. that. English would sound extremely different without pronouns.

  5. The term "third person" refers to someone else, i.e., not the speaker ("I," "me"), a group including the speaker ("we," "us"), or the speaker's audience ("you"). For example: I am speaking to you about her. ("I" is the speaker, so "I" is in the first person. "You" is the person being spoken to, so "you" is in the second person.

  6. Oct 13, 2021 · Third vs. first and second-person pronouns. Third person is one of three points of view. The other two are first person and second person. The first person is used by a writer or speaker to refer to themselves or to a group they are part of. First-person pronouns include I, me, we, us, mine, ours, myself, and ourselves.

  7. Feb 4, 2020 · Unlike first-person (I, our, we, us, ours) and second-person pronouns (you, your, yours), third-person pronouns in the singular are marked for gender: he and she, him and her, his and hers, himself and herself.

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