In rhetoric terms the difference between narration and parusia
is that narration is that part of an oration in which the speaker makes his or her statement of facts while parusia is a figure of speech by which the present tense is used instead of the past or the future, as in the animated narration of past events or the prediction of future ones.
As nouns the difference between narration and parusia
is that narration is the act of recounting or relating in order the particulars of some action, occurrence, or affair; a narrating while parusia is a figure of speech by which the present tense is used instead of the past or the future, as in the animated narration of past events or the prediction of future ones.
narration
English
Noun
(
en noun)
The act of recounting or relating in order the particulars of some action, occurrence, or affair; a narrating.
That which is narrated or recounted; an orderly recital of the details and particulars of some transaction or event, or of a series of transactions or events; a story or narrative.
(rhetoric) That part of an oration in which the speaker makes his or her statement of facts.
Related terms
* narrate
* narrative
* narrator
References
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parusia
English
Noun
(rhetoric) A figure of speech by which the present tense is used instead of the past or the future, as in the animated narration of past events or the prediction of future ones.
(
Webster 1913)
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