0 past simple and past participle of narrate
1 to tell a story, often by reading aloud from a text, or to describe events as they happen:
In the political drama narrated in this book, the main actors are the parties qua institutions and their leaders.
But before they can be adopted as alternative narratives they have to be narrated and employed in convincing case studies.
In narratives, one should distinguish between the time the narrated events take place, and the moment they are narrated.
There are a number of well-known historical events narrated in the book but presented more vibrantly and accompanied by rich archival material.
These are then not modernist (grand) narratives, histories of aesthetic rationality, universal and fixed, but local and temporal (small) narratives: fluid stories, continually narrated.
But however diversified the production of narrated stereotypes may be, the narrator tends periodically to return to the culturally authoritative terms.
A narrated speech segment is formulated as appropriate to such interlocutors in such accounts.
Some of the elder women were remembering and narrated the stories.