Narrative definition
Narrative in ICAR, means both automated and worker-entered documentation of actions taken in processing a child support case.
Narrative. (Provide a complete description of the job/event and the requested duties of the officers.)
Narrative means the sequence of events of a story or song.
Examples of Narrative in a sentence
Narrative agrees to include the various areas of the jobsite where Work was performed and any problems or conditions that were encountered.
Narrative reports will, if possible, be provided in English, French, or Spanish.
Do not use attachments to extend or replace any of the sections of the Project Narrative.
Narrative for how your LEA plans use at least 20% of the total ARP ▇▇▇▇▇ award to address accelerated learning through the implementation of evidence-based outcomes.
Upon receipt of this notice the Grantee shall revise and submit to the Commonwealth a revised Program Summary Budget and if necessary, any revised pages of the Narrative which shall reflect the increase of funds.
More Definitions of Narrative
Narrative style report for use by the print media. Generate a report listing the hole-by-hole scores for each player, and a summary page that breaks out hole-by-hole results for the entire tournament field (number of birdies, pars, bogies, ..., for each hole).
Narrative has a perspective. It means that the narrator can only narrate in the above-mentioned spatial and temporal perspective, and that the dimension of “linguistic articulation” depends on the one of “bodily articulation”. Language certainly articulates the formless world and gives forms to it, but it can happen only based on the world that is already perspectivized and articulated through/with body. The perspective of “narrative” can be realized only based on the spatial and temporal perspective from the origin of <my body>. Since the latter has been elucidated by phenomenology, the “narrative” can only elucidate the dimension of language based on the phenomenological analysis.
Narrative as we use the term, means constructing and telling stories and includes the rhetorical creation of an imaginative world in which the story can happen – a world that gives the story its point. See JEROME BRUNER, ACTS OF MEANING 86 (1990); Jerome Bruner, The Narrative Construction of Reality, 18 CRIT. INQUIRY 1, 13-14 (1991). There are several reasons why this narrative process is crucial in litigation.
Narrative. The narrative provides a physical description of the historic property and a discussion of its history and the property’s historic context. • Photographs: Photographs provide visual documentation of the property as a whole through its significant features and details. • Drawings and plans: Architectural and engineering drawings and plans document the historic property with a precision not available in photography or narrative. MHPR documentation utilizes two levels of documentation, similar to the levels in Historic American Buildings Survey (HABS), Historic American Engineering Record (HAER), and Historic American Landscape Survey (HALS) documentation. Level I documentation provides extensive, detailed information about the historic property. Level II provides a brief, concise documentation. Table 1 provides a comparative summary of the components of two levels.
Narrative means that the scenarios are presented quasi-literary in the stakeholder forum, in its preparation and wrap-up. They are presented as “stories” about notional persons or institutions of the real world. This way of presentation does not only force the facilitator and speakers to a high level of preciseness, details and realism. When preparing and thinking about the narrative presentation and contextualization, the underlying social, economic and cultural visions of the scenario are classified, integrated and analysed with regard to interconnections and possible (unexpected) consequences and impacts.
Narrative means a description of the business context of the undertaking regarding sustainability risks;
Narrative has the meaning given in Clause 7.6;