Synonym: narration, story, tale. Similar words: cooperative, administrative, native, relative, innovative, relatively, initiative, legislative. Meaning: ['nærətɪv] n. a message that tells the particulars of an act or occurrence or course of events; presented in writing or drama or cinema or as a radio or television program. adj. consisting of or characterized by the telling of a story.
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61. Narrative dance applies to those phrases of conversation between individuals or between dancers and public, where the dancer uses explicit gestures.
62. She jumped backwards and forwards in her narrative, creating considerable confusion in Dougal's mind.
63. It is only human of Mr Teicher to make himself into the hero-victim of his own narrative.
64. For many teachers therefore written language is equated with literary language, with the polished performance of narrative, drama or poetry.
65. What aspects of this narrative would add to, or undermine, your confidence in the writer?
66. Masefield's unique narrative style is at its most sustained in these two novels.
67. The linear and temporal progression of the narrative is disrupted by the non-stratified discourse of the text.
68. Victorine Meurent lived in another system of reference, in a narrative as yet unformulated and uncodified, but not uninhabited.
69. During that period I was chiefly concerned with the question of how to structure the narrative.
70. It is a logical ending to a book whose purpose is directly stated and kept consistently in the forefront of the narrative.
71. Hubbard Woods teachers provide parents with a detailed narrative about how students are developing in curricular and social areas.
72. The narrative line wavers, its constant ebb and flow in political affairs and love story creating a sense of drift.
73. For the grand narrative of History was always too big for its boots.
74. It nevertheless refuses to conform to the narrative conventions of nineteenth-century realism.
75. Narrative cinema, Mulvey concluded, is a dead loss for feminists.
76. A lot of albums play at telling a story,[http://sentencedict.com/narrative.html] but few actually deliver a coherent sense of narrative.
77. An increased consciousness of conceptual systems as necessary fictions accompanies a growing awareness of the conventions of narrative.
78. As the Gospel narrative unfolds we are quickly made aware that the good news signifies more than rescue from divine wrath.
79. The first aspect - the role of narrative in learning - is introduced through a study of literature in early childhood education.
80. The present tense is generally also used when telling a story, as in a summary of the narrative of a novel.
81. It follows that narrative poetics is in fact a form of historiography, a highly abstract story of stories.
82. Clearly the criterion for survival has little to do with narrative verve alone.
83. Genette's largest contribution to structuralist narrative theory is his Narrative Discourse.
84. It provides a short summary of the main event of the story, although in itself does not constitute a narrative.
85. A fully formed narrative realises all six categories, although many narratives may lack one or more components.
86. Every derangement of the page-space deftly mimes the current derangement of the house-space in the narrative.
87. These comprise titles that are among the supreme achievements in prose narrative.
88. Unlike old-fashioned narrative history, art has no decisive battles, no international treaties, and no changes of government.
89. These devices can vary enormously in nature and scope: from the overall presentation of narrative structure down to linguistic play.
90. But the narrative of the afterlife is so fully developed it seems to be Self's surreal dystopia of urban alienation.
More similar words: cooperative, administrative, native, relative, innovative, relatively, initiative, legislative, alternative, conservative, representative, array, narrow, arrange, or rather, arrangement, embarrassed, arrive at, active, motive, actively, incentive, deceptive, cognitive, supportive, sensitive, objective, detective, executive, ratio.