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Looking for synonyms for "narrate"? Browse alternatives ranked by relevance — sharper word choices for fiction, poetry, and copywriting.
(v)
To tell; narrate; to relate in detail.
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(transitive) To repeat aloud (some passage, poem or other text previously memorized, or in front of one's eyes), often before an audience.
(transitive, ditransitive) To convey by speech; to say.
(ergative) To rotate, revolve, gyrate (usually quickly); to partially or completely rotate to face another direction.
(n)
An account of real or fictional events.
(transitive) To bring into a relation, association, or connection (between one thing and another).
A person of extraordinary fame or accomplishments.
The aggregate of past events.
To turn into a narrative.
To narrate again.
(transitive) To form or tell stories of; to narrate or describe in a story.
Alternative spelling of narrativize. [To turn into a narrative.]
(transitive) To stand or act in the place of; to perform the duties, exercise the rights, or otherwise act on behalf of
(transitive or intransitive) To inform (someone) about (something).
(transitive) To speak or tell about; declare; narrate; describe.
(transitive) To represent in words.
(transitive) To write about; describe.
(transitive or intransitive) To look at and interpret letters or other information that is written.
An intimate relationship between two people; a love affair.
Words or a formula supposed to have magical powers.
(ambitransitive) To transform into, or present as, an anecdote.
To play a role; to depict a character, person, situation, or event.
(transitive) To entertain with food or drink, especially at one's own expense; to show hospitality to; to pay for as celebration or reward.
To tell again, often differently, what one has read or heard; to paraphrase.
(ambitransitive) To form letters, words or symbols on a surface in order to communicate.
Poetic form in general.
(obsolete) To describe.
(intransitive) To begin a journey or expedition.
(intransitive) To speak with exaggerated or rapturous enthusiasm (about, (up)on or over something).
(specifically) A folk story that is told for entertainment, and not intended to be taken as true.
(UK dialectal, transitive) To utter; mention the name of.
(idiomatic) To give an account of events different from the one previously recounted.
To deliver a spoken or written account or report of something one has been asked or required to do or investigate.
(transitive) To explain by relating circumstances; to show that some one, thing or members of a group are present or have been processed.
(transitive) To increase the extent, number, volume or scope of (something).
To compose or relate fables or fictions; to give a false account of.
A conversation or discussion; usually serious, but informal.
(UK dialectal, Northern England, Scotland) Use; profit; foredeal; advantage.
The act of counting or tallying a quantity.
Information about current events disseminated by the media.
(transitive) To tell (someone) step by step how to do something.
To relate as history.
(transitive, idiomatic) To read something and say the words to inform other people; to call.
(transitive, intransitive) To record (events) in a diary.
(transitive) To describe again.
To express using words, either written or spoken.
To render a representation of something, using words, sounds, images, or other means.
(transitive) To converse or debate concerning a particular topic.
(usually childish) To inform on, to rat out; to tell a person in authority that someone else has done something wrong.
The act of returning.
(ambitransitive) To give a recapitulation of the salient facts; to recapitulate or review.
A formal recording of names, events, transactions, etc.
(intransitive) To recall the past in a private moment, often fondly or nostalgically.
(ambitransitive) To summarize or repeat in concise form.
An item of information put into a temporary or permanent physical medium.
(intransitive) To start an activity with the intention of finishing it.
A statement attributed to a person; a quotation.
(transitive, chiefly dialectal, sometimes reflexive) To talk about; discuss; tell; count; give an account (of).
To relate the history of a family.
(archaic) The act or result of depicturing something or someone.
A portion of something, especially a portion given or allotted to someone.
A casual observation, comment, or statement
(transitive) To deliver a lecture to; to lecture at.
(intransitive) To speak in the manner of a sermon; to preach; to propagate one's morality or opinions with speech.
(transitive) To make (something or someone) into a myth; to create a legend about.
(transitive) To dictate from a list, especially in a way focused on sequential processing.
Senses relating to exerting force or pulling.
(transitive) To speak or to use words to express.
Alternative form of fabulize. [To compose or relate fables or fictions; to give a false account of.]
(transitive, intransitive) To communicate (news or information, especially electronically).
(transitive) To impart or transmit (information or knowledge) to someone; to make known, to tell.
(transitive) To speak for beforehand; engage in advance; make arrangements for; order or reserve in advance.
(adj)
Clear; effective.
An individual feature, fact, or other item, considered separately from the whole of which it is a part.
(uncountable) Expression in words, either speech or writing.
(transitive) To remove paint from.
A spoken lesson or exposition, usually delivered to a group.
(intransitive) To go or come into an enclosed or partially enclosed space.
(transitive) To dramatize again.
Advice; discourse; narration.
To communicate; to make known; to portray.
(obsolete) A nickname.
To explain or describe again.
To record in or as history.
(intransitive) To use rhetorical devices; to rhetoricate.
(transitive) To write a biography of.
(transitive) To communicate knowledge to.
An instance of riding.
(intransitive) To communicate with one's voice, to say words out loud.
(chiefly US) To speak out something that is written, to turn something written into something oral.
(transitive) To continue in (a course or mode of action); to not intermit or fall from; to uphold or maintain.
(transitive) To refer to literally; to convey as objective meaning.
A collection of sheets of paper bound together to hinge at one edge, containing printed or written material, pictures, etc.