English, asked by berrylush80, 5 months ago

2) The English word 'novel' is derived from the Italian 'novella' which means.......

Answers

Answered by kfjfzxbjgfffhkj
6

Explanation:

The present English word for a long work of prose fiction derives from the Italian: novella for "new", "news", or "short story of something new", itself from the Latin: novella, a singular noun use of the neuter plural of novellus, diminutive of novus, meaning "new".

Answered by ZareenaTabassum
1

The Answer is:

The English word 'novel' is derived from the Italian 'novella' which means

"new" or "brief story".

The word "novel" as we know it today comes from the Italian word "novella," which means "new," or "brief account about something fresh."

  • A novel is a created prose tale that is lengthy and rather complicated and deals creatively with human experience.
  • It often involves a linked chain of events involving a large number of people in a particular environment.
  • The book genre has included a wide variety of genres and styles inside its broad framework, including pastiche, prose fiction, Goth, romance, realist, and historical, to name just a few of the more significant ones.
  • The novel is a fiction genre, and fiction seems to be the ability or skill of creating via the written word human life representations that teach, amuse, or both.
  • A novella is a piece of narrative prose fiction that is larger than that of most short stories but shorter than most novels.
  • The Italian word novella, which refers to a short fiction based on actual events, is where the word "novella" originates.

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