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"novel character" is a correct and commonly used phrase in written English.
It refers to a character that appears in a novel, which is a long fictional story. You can use "novel character" when discussing a specific character in a novel or when comparing characters from different novels. For example: - "Jane Eyre is a well-known novel character, loved for her strong and independent nature." - "The novel's protagonist, Harry Potter, is a complex and dynamic character." - "Shakespeare's plays are filled with memorable novel characters, such as Hamlet and Macbeth." - "I find the novel character of Elizabeth Bennet to be relatable and endearing, unlike her haughty sister, Caroline."
Exact(20)
Kan is undoubtedly a novel character in Japanese politics.
He disagreed with Virginia Woolf, who believed that, in the modern novel, character was dead.
Krzyzewski, all but put on the phone line by Garfinkel, said he was a novel character.
True, the war against terrorism has a novel character -- it is remote both geographically and technologically.
Later, protracted legal battles over affirmative action helped popularize a once novel character: the white civil-rights plaintiff.
SPOKEN WORD FORT LEE Fort Lee Library "Dissecting a Mystery Novel: Character, Plot, Murder and Reality," discussion and presentation by E. J. Rand, author of "Say Goodbye".
Similar(40)
As in an episodic novel, characters are introduced with lyrical flourishes and often tersely dispatched by disappearance or death.
In the very novel form there are distortions, variations, whereas the love life of novel characters and their personal interrelations.
Throughout the novel, characters are thrown at us and we're just expected to keep track of them somehow.
As in an episodic novel, characters are introduced with lyrical ﬿ourishes and often tersely dispatched by disappearance or death.
When novel characters sound like mouthpieces for the author's overarching theories about human motivation or psychology, even the least sophisticated readers recognize this intuitively as bad.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com