Associations to the word «Novels»
Noun
- Bestseller
- Austen
- Dickens
- Trilogy
- Verne
- Protagonist
- Fiction
- Novella
- Adaptation
- Thriller
- Balzac
- Fantasy
- Romance
- Screenplay
- Bram
- Dumas
- Pseudonym
- Novelist
- Agatha
- Hemingway
- Suspense
- Burroughs
- Heroine
- Dracula
- Nonfiction
- Booker
- Faulkner
- Sequel
- Frankenstein
- Narrator
- Clancy
- Pulitzer
- Joyce
- Author
- Prose
- Stowe
- Miniseries
- Nebula
- Reviewer
- Realism
- Fleming
- Mystery
- Chronicles
- Conan
- Christie
- Sf
- Adventures
- Satire
- Novels
- Hugo
- Backdrop
- Bantam
- Seller
- Imprint
- Melodrama
- Genre
- Manga
- Orson
- Vidal
- Romantic
- Melville
- Amour
- Saga
- Adventure
- Doubleday
- Writer
- Kingsley
Adjective
Adverb
Wiktionary
NOVEL, adjective. New, original, especially in an interesting way
NOVEL, noun. (obsolete) A novelty; something new. [15th-18th c.]
NOVEL, noun. (now historical) A fable; a short tale, especially one of many making up a larger work. [from 16th c.]
NOVEL, noun. A work of prose fiction, longer than a short story. [from 17th c.]
NOVEL, noun. (classical studies) (historical) A new legal constitution in ancient Rome. [from 17th c.]
Dictionary definition
NOVEL, noun. An extended fictional work in prose; usually in the form of a story.
NOVEL, noun. A printed and bound book that is an extended work of fiction; "his bookcases were filled with nothing but novels"; "he burned all the novels".
NOVEL, adjective. Original and of a kind not seen before; "the computer produced a completely novel proof of a well-known theorem".
NOVEL, adjective. Pleasantly new or different; "common sense of a most refreshing sort".
Wise words
Words - so innocent and powerless as they are, as standing
in a dictionary, how potent for good and evil they become in
the hands of one who knows how to combine them.