Associations to the word «Prose»
Noun
- Folklore
- Quotation
- Tale
- Voltaire
- Prologue
- Criticism
- Allusion
- Vols
- Pamphlet
- Pathos
- Drama
- Novelist
- Idiom
- Style
- Shakespeare
- Commentary
- Ballad
- Anecdote
- Eliot
- Text
- Autobiography
- Rhythm
- Tennyson
- Swift
- Periodical
- Clarity
- Hymn
- Syntax
- Author
- Collection
- Playmate
- Kannada
- Gloss
- Melville
- Critic
- Sermon
- Rhapsody
- Sketch
- Prose
- Libretto
- Emerson
- Work
- Notebook
- Manuscript
- Browne
- Une
- Imitation
- Textbook
- Chronicle
- Composition
- Vita
- Passage
- Renaissance
- Genius
- Grail
- Loki
- Chaucer
- Odin
- Cadence
- Dramatist
- Fragmentary
- Elegy
- Bede
- Iliad
- Allegory
Adjective
Adverb
Wiktionary
PROSE, noun. Language, particularly written language, not intended as poetry.
PROSE, noun. Language which evinces little imagination or animation; dull and commonplace discourse.
PROSE, noun. (Roman Catholicism) A hymn with no regular meter, sometimes introduced into the Mass.
PROSE, verb. To write or repeat in a dull, tedious, or prosy way.
PROSE POEM, noun. (literature) A literary text written in the manner of prose—without the fixed lines, rhyme, and meter often characteristic of poetry—but nonetheless clearly possessing some of the distinctive attributes of poetry, such as lyrical language, evocation of feeling, vivid imagery, metaphor, and linguistic devices like assonance or alliteration.
Dictionary definition
PROSE, noun. Ordinary writing as distinguished from verse.
PROSE, noun. Matter of fact, commonplace, or dull expression.
Wise words
The chief virtue that language can have is clearness, and
nothing detracts from it so much as the use of unfamiliar
words.