a literary work based on the imagination and not necessarily on fact fabrication: a deliberately false or improbable account
Fiction (from the Latin fingere, 'to form, create') is storytelling of imagined events and stands in contrast to non-fiction, which makes factual claims that can be substantiated with evidence.
Fiction is Yuki Kajiura's first solo album, containing remixes of her previous anime work as well as original songs. The Japanese edition features three bonus songs.
Fiction was released in 1982 on Polydor Records. It's The Comsat Angels' third album. The album was reissued on CD twice, in 1995 by RPM records and in 2006 by Renascent, with different track listings.
Fiction is the upcoming album by the Swedish, Melodic death metal band Dark Tranquillity. The earliest release date for the album will be for North America on April 17, 2007. ... imaginative narrative in any form of presentation designed to entertain, as distinguished from that which is designed primarily to explain, argue, or merely describe; specifically, a type of literature, especially prose, as novels and short stories, but also including plays and narrative poetry. Writing that comes from the imagination, or writing that does not adhere to the facts related to true events. Anything that is invented or imagined, especially a prose narrative. Although fiction may be based on actual events or personal experiences, its characters and settings are invented. ... Literature in which the radical of presentation is the printed or written word, such as novels and essays. De Mille, J. The Lady of the Inn. New York, 1870. The Cryptogram. New York, 1871. Literary works which portray imaginary characters and events (especially novels and stories). The fiction collection is located on the second floor of the Library. prose writing that tells an imaginary story. Fiction includes both short stories and novels. Books or novels of imaginary stories, made up by the author. A story, book, or movie that is not based on fact, as in a novel. a literary form, most often prose narrative, drawn from imagination rather than solely from fact. This refers to library materials that deal with imaginary characters and events. Fiction collections are not usually organized with a classification system. An exception to this might be classic literature, which is sometimes included in the non-fiction section. Prose based on something that did not happen or has not happened, implementing plot and character to exemplify thought. In library usage, an invented story with events, characters, and scenes wholly or partly imaginary, as novels and short stories; that which is not fact. Work that comes from a writer's imagination is considered fiction. Types of fiction include short stories, novels, fairy tales, folklore, and fables. Fictional stories may be based on actual events or people or may be based entirely on the author's imagination, but fictional stories all contain elements that are made-up or created by the author. A story that is made up or is not true or is make-believe. A narrative created by the imagination, generally written in prose. writing, a story, that is not true and is not meant to be thought to be true. Fiction stories are written to entertain, to relate a theme to the readers, or both. literature that is not factually true, but may be based on true events. prose that contains imaginary characters, scenes, or events. The emotions and themes are based in truth, but the stories are not true depictions of events. Imaginative works of prose, primarily the novel and the short story; Although fiction draws on actual events and real people, it springs mainly from the imagination of the writer. ... (1) The literary genre that is written in the narrative mode and thus contains five central elements: plot, character, point of view, setting, and theme. Its three forms are the novel, the novella, and the short story. ... books contain elements which cannot, have not, or will not happen in real life.
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