novel - définition. Qu'est-ce que novel
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Qu'est-ce (qui) est novel - définition


novel         
  • 1474: The customer in the copyist's shop with a book he wants to have copied. This illustration of the first printed German [[Melusine]] looked back to the market of manuscripts.
  • Intimate short stories: ''The Court and City Vagaries'' (1711).
  • 1719 newspaper reprint of ''Robinson Crusoe''
  • [[Laurence Sterne]], ''[[Tristram Shandy]]'', vol.6, pp. 70–71 (1769)
  • Chaucer]] reciting ''[[Troilus and Criseyde]]'': early-15th-century manuscript of the work at [[Corpus Christi College, Cambridge]]
  • [[Chinua Achebe]], Buffalo, 2008
  • [[Dan Brown]]
  • [[Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn]], Vladivostok, 1995
  • [[J. K. Rowling]], 2010
  • [[Madame de Pompadour]] spending her afternoon with a book ([[François Boucher]], 1756)
  • [[Richard Head]], ''The English Rogue'' (1665)
  • Pamela]]'' (1741)
  • First edition of [[Aleksis Kivi]]'s ''[[The Seven Brothers]]'' (1870)
  • Paper as the essential carrier: [[Murasaki Shikibu]] writing her ''[[The Tale of Genji]]'' in the early 11th century, 17th-century depiction
  • [[Harriet Beecher Stowe]]'s ''[[Uncle Tom's Cabin]]'' (1852)
  • Waverley]]'' (1814)
NARRATIVE TEXT, NORMALLY OF A SUBSTANTIAL LENGTH AND IN THE FORM OF PROSE DESCRIBING A FICTIONAL AND SEQUENTIAL STORY
Novels; Proto-novel; Modern novel; Histories (history of the novel); Candidates for the first novel; Early novels; Proto-novels; Literary novel; Novel (literature); History of the novel; History of novels; The novel; Poetic Novel; 20th-century novels; 18th-century novels; 19th-century novels; 20th century novels
I. a.
New, strange, unusual, modern, recent, fresh, uncommon, rare.
II. n.
Tale, romance, story, fiction, fictitious narrative.
novel         
  • 1474: The customer in the copyist's shop with a book he wants to have copied. This illustration of the first printed German [[Melusine]] looked back to the market of manuscripts.
  • Intimate short stories: ''The Court and City Vagaries'' (1711).
  • 1719 newspaper reprint of ''Robinson Crusoe''
  • [[Laurence Sterne]], ''[[Tristram Shandy]]'', vol.6, pp. 70–71 (1769)
  • Chaucer]] reciting ''[[Troilus and Criseyde]]'': early-15th-century manuscript of the work at [[Corpus Christi College, Cambridge]]
  • [[Chinua Achebe]], Buffalo, 2008
  • [[Dan Brown]]
  • [[Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn]], Vladivostok, 1995
  • [[J. K. Rowling]], 2010
  • [[Madame de Pompadour]] spending her afternoon with a book ([[François Boucher]], 1756)
  • [[Richard Head]], ''The English Rogue'' (1665)
  • Pamela]]'' (1741)
  • First edition of [[Aleksis Kivi]]'s ''[[The Seven Brothers]]'' (1870)
  • Paper as the essential carrier: [[Murasaki Shikibu]] writing her ''[[The Tale of Genji]]'' in the early 11th century, 17th-century depiction
  • [[Harriet Beecher Stowe]]'s ''[[Uncle Tom's Cabin]]'' (1852)
  • Waverley]]'' (1814)
NARRATIVE TEXT, NORMALLY OF A SUBSTANTIAL LENGTH AND IN THE FORM OF PROSE DESCRIBING A FICTIONAL AND SEQUENTIAL STORY
Novels; Proto-novel; Modern novel; Histories (history of the novel); Candidates for the first novel; Early novels; Proto-novels; Literary novel; Novel (literature); History of the novel; History of novels; The novel; Poetic Novel; 20th-century novels; 18th-century novels; 19th-century novels; 20th century novels
novel1
¦ noun a fictitious prose narrative of book length.
Origin
C16: from Ital. novella (storia) 'new (story)'.
--------
novel2
¦ adjective interestingly new or unusual.
Derivatives
novelly adverb
Origin
ME: from OFr., from L. novellus, from novus 'new'.
novel         
  • 1474: The customer in the copyist's shop with a book he wants to have copied. This illustration of the first printed German [[Melusine]] looked back to the market of manuscripts.
  • Intimate short stories: ''The Court and City Vagaries'' (1711).
  • 1719 newspaper reprint of ''Robinson Crusoe''
  • [[Laurence Sterne]], ''[[Tristram Shandy]]'', vol.6, pp. 70–71 (1769)
  • Chaucer]] reciting ''[[Troilus and Criseyde]]'': early-15th-century manuscript of the work at [[Corpus Christi College, Cambridge]]
  • [[Chinua Achebe]], Buffalo, 2008
  • [[Dan Brown]]
  • [[Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn]], Vladivostok, 1995
  • [[J. K. Rowling]], 2010
  • [[Madame de Pompadour]] spending her afternoon with a book ([[François Boucher]], 1756)
  • [[Richard Head]], ''The English Rogue'' (1665)
  • Pamela]]'' (1741)
  • First edition of [[Aleksis Kivi]]'s ''[[The Seven Brothers]]'' (1870)
  • Paper as the essential carrier: [[Murasaki Shikibu]] writing her ''[[The Tale of Genji]]'' in the early 11th century, 17th-century depiction
  • [[Harriet Beecher Stowe]]'s ''[[Uncle Tom's Cabin]]'' (1852)
  • Waverley]]'' (1814)
NARRATIVE TEXT, NORMALLY OF A SUBSTANTIAL LENGTH AND IN THE FORM OF PROSE DESCRIBING A FICTIONAL AND SEQUENTIAL STORY
Novels; Proto-novel; Modern novel; Histories (history of the novel); Candidates for the first novel; Early novels; Proto-novels; Literary novel; Novel (literature); History of the novel; History of novels; The novel; Poetic Novel; 20th-century novels; 18th-century novels; 19th-century novels; 20th century novels
n.
1) to publish; write a novel
2) a detective, mystery; dime; historical novel
3) (misc.) to make a novel into a film

Wikipédia

Novel
A novel is a relatively long work of narrative fiction, typically written in prose and published as a book. The present English word for a long work of prose fiction derives from the for "new", "news", or "short story of something new", itself from the , a singular noun use of the neuter plural of novellus, diminutive of novus, meaning "new".
Exemples du corpus de texte pour novel
1. Her novel, alas, does not include novel perspective.
2. The prize pits the winners of five book categories – poetry, biography, children‘s, debut novel and novel – against each other.
3. In the first round, winners are chosen from five separate categories: novel, first novel, children‘s book, biography and poetry.
4. "When my first novel Metroland 1'80 was published it would be reviewed with Melvyn Bragg‘s new novel.
5. Every time he finished a novel, he bought a yacht, which meant he had to write another novel.