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novelists

n. (plural of novelist English)

Usage examples of "novelists".

The matter cannot be left to the novelists any more than to the modelers, though the former certainly make a better fist of it, and are easier to read.

These classifications based on experience permeate our adult life, how we perceive and what we remember, in ways that we all recognize, though - except for the novelists and filmmakers amongst us - we may find it hard to articulate them.

Quite apart from the sort of memory that neurobiologists, psychologists and even novelists talk about and with which I am concerned, mathematics and physics, chemistry, molecular biology, genetics, immunology and evolutionary biology, not to mention computer science, all use the term.

The novelists Harry favored never suggested that even the worst human behavior was alterable.

Maybe the simplest way to put it is that the journalists who write about novels and novelists in Europe, and in Canada, are better than they are in the United States.

And if the novelists and essayists have raised a mist about the sex, which it willingly masquerades in, is it not time that the scientists should determine whether the mystery exists in nature or only in the imagination?

It would hardly be worth while to refer to this taste in the apparel of our fiction did it not have deep and esoteric suggestions, and could not the novelists themselves get a hint from it.

And this leads to a remark upon the shocking indifference of some novelists to the ordinary comfort of their characters.

But the conduct of the novelists and the painters makes the task of the conservators of society doubly perplexing.

But it is not strange that in the apathy on this subject the novelists should be careless and inconsiderate as to the characters they produce, either as ideals or examples.

But the novelists have too little sense of responsibility in this respect, probably from an inadequate conception of their power.

Her enterprise, her daring, her freedom from conventionality, have been the theme of the novelists and the horror of the dowagers having marriageable daughters.

Is she content to be the woman that some of the novelists, and some of the painters also, say she is, or would she prefer to approach that ideal which all the world loves?

We know very well the influence that the heroines of the novelists have had from time to time upon the women of a given period.

Put when the main body of American novelists got fairly ashore and into position the literary militia of the island rose up as one man, with the strength of a thousand, to repel the invaders and sweep them back across the Atlantic.