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Discover Ludwig"narrative reads" is a grammatically correct and usable phrase in written English
It can be used when describing a narrative or story, or when discussing the way in which a story is told or written. For example, "The narrative reads like a thrilling mystery, with unexpected twists and turns." This sentence is conveying the way in which the story is written, using the verb "reads" to describe the manner in which the narrative unfolds for the reader.
Exact(7)
In places the narrative reads more like collage than drama.
To British eyes, the narrative reads like a dispatch from the near-future.
On the surface, the narrative reads like a work of fictional farce and yet a closer analysis shows that Cameron was to some extent trapped in a drama out of his control.
At times the narrative reads like a charge sheet as she explores the murders of prominent opposition journalists and politicians, the arrests of opponents and her conviction that Mr Putin was and is a KGB man to the core".
At times her narrative reads like the archetypical Western narrative of liberation from the constraints of tradition, as when she celebrates the influence of Western literature and her Jewish classmates in Scarsdale, whose conversation was "so funny, so gory, so exactingly blow-by-blow".
The narrative reads in part like an account of a modern gang war among the cactus and sagebrush, a battle for position and prestige, overlaid with a skewed sense of honor but underpinned by animal brutality and a careless approach to the value of a life.
Similar(53)
"What's new with Trouble is the narrative": read teen site member Joel's review here.
Writing about your achievements can be tricky, though, and parts of the narrative read like grant proposals, with separate sections written by either Mark or Delia.
Although, like "The Voyage Out," "Night and Day" remains, in its structure, its scenes and dialogues, a conventional narrative, reading it you get the sense of the modern novel jarring against its romantic antecedent.
The hourlong piece, which will include a narrative read by the actor Joel Grey, explores how earlier generations of New Yorkers transformed restaurants, parks and streets from Harlem to Brooklyn into places for themselves, despite deep-seated prejudice and legal prosecution.
Certainly parts of the narrative read like an 18th-century novel: at 17, Delany was married by her wicked uncle to a 60-year-old drunken squire, who tore her away from her family to live in a rotting Cornish castle.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com