Anything can be a character in a story.
Characters are any beings in your story, not just the main one. You can have human characters, or animals, or aliens, or even sometimes inanimate objects!
Even inanimate objects can enter into the random spirit.
Probably Not. Any virus, especially one as Herpes, requires heat, and is sensitive to many elements in order to survive. When it is passed onto an inanimate object, if left for even a moment it should die, rendering it unable to be infectious. Hope this helped you, Good Luck.
No. It is an inanimate object. It cannot even move unless acted upon by an outside force. The person (or thing) that pulls the trigger can kill, not the gun.
Germs can live on anything. If by harmful bacteria, then yes. They can. Even inanimate objects.
The Spacebar acts as a character, even though it is not a letter in Microsoft Word it is classed as a character.
The antagonist is the character who, consciously or unconsciously, plays a central role in opposing the main character's goals. In many cases, it's the villain. However, in works where the main character is evil (e.g. Poe's "Tell Tale Heart"), the antagonist might be the good guy. So, to figure out who the antagonist is, ask, "Who is the main character?" and then "Who is the main character's opponent or foe? Who is preventing the main character from doing what he/she wants to?" The antagonist is important because conflict fuels most plots.
Cal Kestis
no he is not even though u think he is....... he is not.
Of course - they can be supernatural beings, animals, aliens or even inanimate objects.
I don't know WHY the heck anyone would ask this, but I guess I have to answer... First, Elmer's Glue is an object, which is NOT alive. In other words, anything that's not alive cannot move, or EAT. Why would you even think of that???
they are kind of small, i would be afraid to of something larger than me, even if it didn't move