「novel」

adj. 新奇的;异常的
n. 小说
n. (Novel)人名;(法、西、英)诺韦尔

英 ['nɒv(ə)l] 美 [ˈnɑːvl]

权威例句

  1. The various elements of the novel fail to cohere.
    这部小说的各部分之间缺乏连贯性。
    来自柯林斯例句
  2. The scriptwriter helped him to adapt his novel for the screen.
    编剧帮助他将其所著小说改编成电影。
    来自柯林斯例句
  3. D H Lawrence immortalised her in his novel "Women in Love". D.H.
    劳伦斯在小说《恋爱中的女人》中把她塑造成了一个不朽的角色。
    来自柯林斯例句
  4. This adaptation perfectly captures the spirit of Kurt Vonnegut's novel.
    这次改编非常好地抓住了库尔特·冯内古特小说的精髓。
    来自柯林斯例句
  5. "Dottie" is by far his best novel to date.
    《多蒂》是他迄今为止最好的小说。
    来自柯林斯例句

中文词源

novel 小说

来自拉丁语novus,新的,词源同new,-el,小词后缀。引申词义新事物,新故事,后特别用于指一种文学体裁,即小故事,小说(长篇小说)。

英文词源

novel
**novel: **English has acquired the word _novel _in several distinct instalments. First to arrive was the adjective, ‘new’ [15], which came via Old French from Latin novellus, a derivative of _novus _‘new’ (to which English _new _is distantly related). (The Old French derived noun _novelte _had already reached English as _novelty _[14].) Next on the scene was a now obsolete noun _novel _‘new thing, novelty’ [15], which went back to Latin novella, a noun use of the neuter plural of novellus.

In Italian, _novellus _became novello, and this was used in storia novella, literally ‘new story’, a term which denoted ‘short story’. English adopted this as a third _novel _[16], at first referring specifically to Italian short stories of the type written by Boccaccio, but by the mid- 17th century being extended to a longer ‘prose narrative’ (the original Italian _novella _was reborrowed in the early 20th century for a ‘short novel’).

English is also indebted to Latin _novus _for _nova _[19] (etymologically a ‘new star’) and _novice _[14].

novel (adj.)
"new, strange, unusual," early 15c., but little used before 1600, from Old French novel, nouvel "new, young, fresh, recent; additional; early, soon" (Modern French nouveau, fem. nouvelle), from Latin novellus "new, young, recent," diminutive of novus "new" (see new).
novel (n.)
"fictitious narrative," 1560s, from Italian novella "short story," originally "new story," from Latin novella "new things" (source of Middle French novelle, French nouvelle), neuter plural or fem. of novellus (see novel (adj.)). Originally "one of the tales or short stories in a collection" (especially Boccaccio's), later (1630s) "long work of fiction," works which had before that been called romances.

A novel is like a violin bow; the box which gives off the sounds is the soul of the reader. [Stendhal, "Life of Henri Brulard"]

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