All 8 Uses of
novel
in
Main Street
- She had, she meditated, passed through the novelty of seeing the town and meeting people, of skating and sliding and hunting.†
Chpt 7 (definition 1)
- They admired the diamonds and furs and frosty silverware and mahogany chairs and polished morocco sewing-boxes in shop-windows, and were abashed by the throngs in the department-stores, and were bullied by a clerk into buying too many shirts for Kennicott, and gaped at the "clever novelty perfumes—just in from New York."†
Chpt 17 (definition 1)
- For the first time in Gopher Prairie Carol had found novelty.†
Chpt 22 (definition 1)
- In Gopher Prairie the only ardent new topics were prohibition, the place in Minneapolis where you could get whisky at thirteen dollars a quart, recipes for home-made beer, the "high cost of living," the presidential election, Clark's new car, and not very novel foibles of Cy Bogart.
Chpt 39 (definition 1) *novel = new and original
Uses with a very common or rare meaning:
- What I like in books is a wholesome, really improving story, and sometimes——Why, once I started a novel by this fellow Balzac that you read about, and it told how a lady wasn't living with her husband, I mean she wasn't his wife.†
Chpt 5 (definition 2)
- One small square table contained a card-receiver of painted china with a rim of wrought and gilded lead, a Family Bible, Grant's Memoirs, the latest novel by Mrs. Gene Stratton Porter, a wooden model of a Swiss chalet which was also a bank for dimes, a polished abalone shell holding one black-headed pin and one empty spool, a velvet pin-cushion in a gilded metal slipper with "Souvenir of Troy, N. Y." stamped on the toe, and an unexplained red glass dish which had warts.†
Chpt 11 (definition 2)
- "I never read a novel till I got 'Dorothy Vernon of Haddon Hall' out of the library at Curlew.†
Chpt 29 (definition 2) *
- They bathed in the surf and climbed foothills and danced, they saw a polo game and the making of motion-pictures, they sent one hundred and seventeen souvenir post-cards to Gopher Prairie, and once, on a dune by a foggy sea when she was walking alone, Carol found an artist, and he looked up at her and said, "Too damned wet to paint; sit down and talk," and so for ten minutes she lived in a romantic novel.†
Chpt 34 (definition 2)
Definitions:
-
(1) (novel as in: a novel situation) new and original -- typically something considered good
-
(2) (meaning too common or rare to warrant focus) More commonly, novel is used as a noun to refer to work of fiction that is published as a book. In the form novelty, the word can refer to an inexpensive, mass-produced item of interest such as a toy, trinket, or item given away to advertise.