Definitions
Sorry, no definitions found. Check out and contribute to the discussion of this word!
Etymologies
Sorry, no etymologies found.
Support

Help support Wordnik (and make this page ad-free) by adopting the word narrative's.
Examples
-
Famke is a horrible woman, and despite the narrative's assurances that we must love her, the reader cannot identify with such a shallow, idiotic, and careless person.
Narrative Strategies 2009
-
Altamirano describes himself as a "Historian of Parallel Lives," but he frequently loops away from the narrative's main tracks.
A Tale of Two Joes, One of Them Conrad Sam Sacks 2011
-
But there was no need to wait for Glenn and Rush to come to their narrative's rescue.
Marty Kaplan: The Vitriol in Our National Bloodstream Marty Kaplan 2011
-
Fortunately, Banks adopts in Cloudsplitter a narrative strategy similar to that which Melville uses in Moby-Dick, a strategy that takes advantage of the overwhelming personality of John Brown to maintain the narrative's dramatic interest but otherwise focuses much of the novel's attention on the charged relationship between Brown and the narrator of Brown's story, his son Owen.
Historical Fiction 2010
-
This goes like this: Greece is a country of the "periphery", whose essential nature is to be poor but honest the blend of fashionable social science, metaphysics and archaic moralism is not mine, but the narrative's.
-
But there was no need to wait for Glenn and Rush to come to their narrative's rescue.
Marty Kaplan: The Vitriol in Our National Bloodstream Marty Kaplan 2011
-
But there was no need to wait for Glenn and Rush to come to their narrative's rescue.
Marty Kaplan: The Vitriol in Our National Bloodstream Marty Kaplan 2011
-
But there was no need to wait for Glenn and Rush to come to their narrative's rescue.
Marty Kaplan: The Vitriol in Our National Bloodstream Marty Kaplan 2011
-
But there was no need to wait for Glenn and Rush to come to their narrative's rescue.
Marty Kaplan: The Vitriol in Our National Bloodstream Marty Kaplan 2011
-
Fortunately, Banks adopts in Cloudsplitter a narrative strategy similar to that which Melville uses in Moby-Dick, a strategy that takes advantage of the overwhelming personality of John Brown to maintain the narrative's dramatic interest but otherwise focuses much of the novel's attention on the charged relationship between Brown and the narrator of Brown's story, his son Owen.
August 2009 2009
Comments
Log in or sign up to get involved in the conversation. It's quick and easy.