A story in which the narrator is also a character uses

(1 point)
first-person point of view. second-person point of view. third-person limited point of view. third-person omniscient point of view.

The correct answer is first-person point of view. In a story where the narrator is also a character, they would tell the story from their own perspective using "I" or "we", which is a characteristic of first-person point of view.

This time they're really killing us, killing all girls and women."

This passage from My Forbidden Face explains how the Taliban in Afghanistan
(1 point)
took away many rights of women and girls. put women and girls in jail.
secretly poisoned women and girls.
took women and girls away from their homes.

The correct answer is took away many rights of women and girls. The passage states that the Taliban in Afghanistan was killing girls and women, which implies that they were taking away their rights and committing violence against them. There is no mention of putting them in jail, secretly poisoning them, or taking them away from their homes.

Which best describes the setting of Maya Angelou’s autobiography I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings?

(1 point)
a nineteenth-century plantation
a large, segregated city in the 1920s
a small Southern town in the 1940s
a household torn by conflict in the 1960s

The best description of the setting of Maya Angelou's autobiography "I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings" is a small Southern town in the 1940s. The book is primarily set in Stamps, Arkansas, where Maya Angelou spent a significant portion of her childhood.

In W.G. Wetherell’s short story “The Bass, the River, and Sheila Mant,” the narrator is torn between pursuing a fish and continuing his date with Sheila. What type of conflict is shown here?

(1 point)
man vs. nature man vs. man man vs. family man vs. himself

The type of conflict shown in W.G. Wetherell's short story "The Bass, the River, and Sheila Mant" is man vs. himself. The narrator is torn between his passion for fishing (man vs. nature) and his desire to impress and continue his date with Sheila (man vs. man). Ultimately, it is an internal struggle for the narrator to decide what he values more, leading to the conflict of man vs. himself.