The title of the book is Gadsby: A Story of Over 50,000 Words Without Using the Letter "E"
It was written by Ernest Vincent Wright in 1939.
In English, not usually except for words like "very" This is different for each language's grammar
No, we can be quite confident there is no novel with all words in the English language in it. Different people have different ideas of what the size of the English language is. Some small dictionaries have 60,000 or 100,000 words. I have read that some large ones have 600,000 words. There is probably not one person who knows the meanings of all the words in the largest English language dictionaries. There is no dictionary that includes the definitions of all words in the English language. Even the largest dictionaries do not have the meanings of all words. When a dictionary is edited, the editors have to decide what to include and what not to include on the basis of how important words are. Typically, a dictionary editing staff leaves tens or hundreds of thousands of words out. Entire classes of words are not included. Only the most commonly used words for organic chemicals are included. I read many years ago that there were over 600,000 names of organic compounds. My guess is that there are over a million today. Most novels have about 100,000 words or fewer.
There aren't any Spanish words that end in K. K is not used in Spanish writing, except in a very few loan words from English and other foreign languages.
Novella
nourish
That would be a novel.
e
The novel written without using the letter "e" is called "Gadsby" by Ernest Vincent Wright. It is a 50,000-word novel published in 1939.
Writing a fictional prose with many characters and a complex plot of over 50000 words would require meticulous planning to keep track of character arcs and plot developments. You may want to outline the main events and character motivations to ensure coherence throughout the narrative. Remember to allow room for character growth and keep the plot moving forward steadily to engage your readers.
There are no words in English that end with 'chop' except chop.
This is an English word. English words are never masculine or feminine (except him, her, he, she, etc.).
I Before E Except After C - This is a rule in English when spelling words such as believe versus receive
Fifty Thousand
50,000 = fifty thousand.
50,000 Fifty thousand
The Latin adjective novus, nova, novum (masculine, feminine, neuter forms) is the origin of English words such as novelty, supernova, novel, renovate, innovate, innovative, innovation, novice, novitiate.
In English, not usually except for words like "very" This is different for each language's grammar