Read the passage below from “Marigolds” and answer question.

Miss Lottie’s house was the most ramshackle of all our ramshackle homes. The sun and rain had long since faded its rickety frame siding from white to a sullen gray. The boards themselves seemed to remain upright not from being nailed together but rather from leaning together, like a house that a child might have constructed from cards. A brisk wind might have blown it down, and the fact that it was still standing implied a kind of enchantment that was stronger than the elements. There it stood and as far as I know is standing yet—a gray, rotting thing with no porch, no shutters, no steps, set on a cramped lot with no grass, not even any weeds—a monument to decay.

The passage above is an example of which point of view?

Third-person limited
First person
Third-person omniscient
Switches between first-person and third-person limited

Respuesta :

it is a third person omniscient it is really simple of the answer by looking at it 

Answer:

First-person

Explanation:

This is an example of a first-person point of view. First-person point of view occurs when the narrator is telling us how things look from his or her perspective. The most common way to identify this person is by looking at whether the author uses the pronoun "I" when telling the story. The author employs it in this passage, as we can see from the sentence:

"There it stood and as far as I know is standing yet—a gray, rotting thing with no porch, no shutters, no steps, set on a cramped lot with no grass, not even any weeds—a monument to decay."

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