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Discover LudwigThe phrase "about the protagonist" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used when discussing themes, character development, or plot elements related to the main character in a story or narrative.
Example: "The novel provides deep insights about the protagonist, revealing their motivations and struggles throughout the journey."
Alternatives: "regarding the main character" or "concerning the lead character".
Exact(18)
"I think about the protagonist, and what his life is like.
It was a shock at the end to realise how much I cared about the protagonist.
We're conditioned to finding out more about the protagonist as a play goes on, but this one gives us less.
We included information about the protagonist that might help make sense of the action in question: in some cases, that information was about a history of psychologically horrific events that the individual had experienced (e.g., suffering abuse as a child), and in some cases it was about biological characteristics or anomalies in the individual's brain (e.g., an imbalance in neurotransmitters).
Ramos' fourth novel, La casa del ahorcado, is a satirical work about the protagonist's impotence.
To this day, the horror of the heterogeneous is the essential neurosis of the commercial cinema, which is why the tiny subplot in "Greenberg" about the protagonist's letter to the Times about Pakistan is so extraordinary.
Similar(40)
Still, a good deal of evidence has since emerged about the protagonists and their testimony.
You think about the protagonists and their choices; you root for happy endings.
But it could just as easily be described as a romantic comedy where you actually care about the protagonists.
There's a danger that the story will disintegrate and the reader won't care enough about the protagonists to follow the twists and redoublings of an intricate plot.
In both cases the narration reveals so little about the protagonists' inner lives that we begin to feel, a little uncomfortably, that Adichie is delivering the "news" the West wants to hear about Africa: pitiful victims, incorrigible villains, inspirational survivors.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com