Associations to the word «Novels»
Noun
- Aubrey
- Lowry
- Allusion
- Wolfe
- Alienation
- Poem
- Cloning
- Wonderland
- Gone
- Crime
- Weekly
- Drama
- Gustave
- Read
- Sparks
- Garner
- Greene
- Heller
- Critic
- Milieu
- Tarzan
- Dahl
- Murdoch
- Pen
- Blackwood
- Wilder
- Starring
- Alternate
- Nobel
- Yong
- Twentieth
- Bellamy
- Locale
- Erich
- Walpole
- Parody
- Watchman
- Malayalam
- Scarlet
- Conrad
- Trask
- Roderick
- Egan
- Jacqueline
- Cartoonist
- Chronicle
- Debut
- Neal
- Scholastic
- Rosemary
- Rhys
- Android
- Obsession
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
A designer knows he has achieved perfection not when there
is nothing left to add, but when there is nothing left to
take away.