A novel is a book-length fictional manuscript whose pages when printed and bound inside a cover becomes a book. Just being fictional and bound isn't enough -- collections of short stories, novellas, and other fictional texts can be bound, but they don't thereby become a novel.
A book consists of printed sheets that can be made of almost any material (paper, parchment, fiberboard etc.) that is fastened/bound together on one side and usually protected by some type of covering. Although these are often bound, again, binding isn't essential. For example, books can be electronic with scanned images. The lack of binding doesn't mean that it isn't a book. Additionally, a book -- in common usage -- tends to have a copyright and be the product of a publisher. One could debate this aspect (e.g., is an unpublished diary a book?) In short, a novel is usually a book, but a book isn't necessarily a novel. The terms aren't interchangeable. Just remember that novel normally refers only to works of fiction. If the book isn't fiction, it isn't a novel. (There is a subgenre of nonfiction sometimes called a "nonfictional novel"; the first well-known example of this is Truman Capote's "In Cold Blood".)
Book refers to the physical attributes of a thing. It is made of paper, wood, involves ink and pages attached to a spine by glue. A novel refers to the structure of the intellectual content of a book.
stage directions
Nothing.
Script
::stage directions::
Your modifier 'dialogue' may imply that what you want to write is a speech.In all film scripts, the word dialog describes the words that actors speak. Dialog is only part of what's written in any script. Action, and visual clues are also documented in a script.
the difference between play script and drama are the play script has couching and drama is no couchingbow Myra 18 "{P?"{::"""
the script
Dialogue = 2+ people Monologue = 1 person
It will have the name of her character and a colon
You try to reach an agreement in a negotiation whereas you communicate information in a dialogue.
In a script, the screenwriter gives characters dialog to speak.The script writer notes a character's name, which sits on a line by itself, and under that, the words that the character speaks.Example:ADAMI can't get the cap off this bottle! Please help me.Proper formatting is always required, depending on the medium for which you're writing the script.
"Super"script raises the letter above the line "Sub"script lowers the letter below