scenarietreferring
Scenarietreferring is a term used in narrative theory and linguistics to describe a discourse mechanism in which a text signals or invokes an external or implied scenario rather than detailing concrete events. The concept centers on how writers, speakers, or translators guide interpretation by referring to typical, potential, or culturally salient scenarios instead of directly describing what happens.
The mechanism operates through language that frames discourse around a scenario template. This can involve conditional
Applications of scenarietreferring appear across literary analysis, screenwriting, and media studies. In fiction, it supports world-building
Etymology and relation: scenarietreferring fuses scenario—a planned sequence of events—with referring, highlighting its role as a