Diction
fusing multiple narratives into a single voice.
Stephen Hamilton Buccleugh has written: 'The dialogics of narratives: a study of narrative voice and description in the fiction of Elizabeth Bowen'
Voices is a noun (plural form of voice) and a verb (third person singular conjugation of voice).
This question is too vague. We could talk about first-person narratives, third-person narratives and third-person omniscient narratives. We could talk about narratives written in the past tense and those written in the present tense and those which cannot make up their minds. We could talk about quest-type narratives, or mystery-type narratives, or romance-type narratives, or conflict-type narratives. We could distinguish between mundane narratives, epic narratives, and mythic narratives. There are lots of possibilities here.
voice
no
Bass
yes, there are conclusions in narratives...
Writers write narratives.
No, neither part of the sentence is in passive voice.
Tenor.
Why are there contradictions in the biblical narratives?