Català > autora: 2 sentits > nom 1, person Sentit | Writes (books or stories or articles or the like) professionally (for pay). |
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Sinònims | autor, escriptor |
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Espècimens | A. A. Milne, A.A. Milne, Alan Alexander Milne | English writer of stories for children (1882-1956) |
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Agatha Christie | prolific English writer of detective stories (1890-1976) |
Alan Paton | South African writer (1903-1988) |
Albert Camus, Camus | French writer who portrayed the human condition as isolated / isolated in an absurd world (1913-1960) |
Aldous Huxley | English writer |
Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn | Soviet writer and political dissident whose novels exposed the brutality of Soviet labor camps (born in 1918) |
Alessandro Manzoni, Manzoni | Italian novelist and poet (1785-1873) |
Alex Haley, Haley | United States writer and Afro-American who wrote a fictionalized account of tracing his family roots back / back to Africa (1921-1992) |
Alexandre Dumas, Dumas | French writer remembered for his swashbuckling historical tales (1802-1870) |
Alfred de Musset | French poet and writer (1810-1857) |
Alice B. Toklas | United States writer remembered as the secretary and companion of Gertrude Stein (1877-1967) |
Alice Walker, Walker | United States writer (born in 1944) |
Ambrose Bierce | United States writer of caustic wit (1842-1914) |
Anatole France | French writer of sophisticated novels and short stories (1844-1924) |
Andersen, Hans Christian Andersen | A Danish author remembered for his fairy stories (1805-1875) |
Anderson, Sherwood Anderson | United States author whose works were frequently autobiographical (1876-1941) |
Andre Gide | French author and dramatist who is regarded as the father of modern French literature (1869-1951) |
Anna Eleanor Roosevelt, Eleanor Roosevelt | wife of Franklin Roosevelt and a strong advocate of human rights (1884-1962) |
Anthony Burgess | English writer of satirical novels (1917-1993) |
Anthony Trollope | English writer of novels (1815-1882) |
Arthur Conan Doyle, Conan Doyle, Sir Arthur Conan Doyle | British author who created Sherlock Holmes (1859-1930) |
Arthur Koestler | British writer (born in Hungary) who wrote a novel exposing the Stalinist purges during the 1930s (1905-1983) |
Austen, Jane Austen | English novelist noted for her insightful portrayals of middle-class families (1775-1817) |
Ayn Rand | United States writer (born in Russia) noted for her polemical novels and political conservativism (1905-1982) |
Baldwin, James Baldwin | United States author who was an outspoken critic of racism / racism (1924-1987) |
Beatrice Webb | English writer and a central member of the Fabian Society (1858-1943) |
Beckett, Samuel Beckett | A playwright and novelist (born in Ireland) who lived in France |
Ben Hecht | United States writer of stories and plays (1894-1946) |
Benet | United States writer |
Benjamin Franklin | printer whose success as an author led him to take up politics |
Bernard Malamud | United States writer (1914-1986) |
Bernard Shaw, George Bernard Shaw, Shaw | British playwright (born in Ireland) |
Boris Pasternak, Pasternak | Russian writer whose best known novel was banned by Soviet authorities but translated and published / published abroad (1890-1960) |
Boyle | United States writer (1902-1992) |
Bram Stoker | Irish writer of the horror novel about Dracula (1847-1912) |
Bret Harte | United States writer noted for his stories about life during the California gold rush (1836-1902) |
Calvino, Italo Calvino | Italian writer of novels and short stories (born in Cuba) (1923-1987) |
Carl Sandburg | United States writer remembered for his poetry in free verse and his six volume biography of Abraham Lincoln (1878-1967) |
Carlos Fuentes Macías, Carlos Fuentes | Mexican novelist (born in 1928) |
Carroll, Charles Lutwidge Dodgson, Lewis Carroll | English author |
Carson McCullers | United States novelist (1917-1967) |
Cecil Scott Forester | English writer of adventure novels featuring Captain Horatio Hornblower (1899-1966) |
Cervantes, Miguel de Cervantes | Spanish writer best remembered for 'Don Quixote' which satirizes chivalry and influenced the development of the novel form (1547-1616) |
Chandler, Raymond Chandler | United States writer of detective thrillers featuring the character of Philip Marlowe (1888-1959) |
Charles Dickens, Dickens | English writer whose novels depicted and criticized social injustice (1812-1870) |
Charles Percy Snow, Snow | English writer of novels about moral dilemmas in academe (1905-1980) |
Chateaubriand | French statesman and writer |
Cheever, John Cheever | United States writer of novels and short stories (1912-1982) |
Chesterton, Gilbert Keith Chesterton, G. K. Chesterton | Conservative English writer of the Roman Catholic persuasion |
Chloe Anthony Wofford, Toni Morrison | United States writer whose novels describe the lives of African-Americans (born in 1931) |
Chopin, Kate Chopin | United States writer who described Creole life in Louisiana (1851-1904) |
Christopher Isherwood | United States writer (born in England) whose best known novels portray Berlin in the 1930's and who collaborated with W. H. Auden in writing plays in verse (1904-1986) |
Churchill, Winston Churchill | British statesman and leader during World War II |
Clive Staples Lewis, C. S. Lewis, Lewis | English critic and novelist |
Cocteau, Jean Cocteau | French writer and film maker who worked in many artistic media (1889-1963) |
Colette, Sidonie-Gabrielle Colette | French writer of novels about women (1873-1954) |
Collins, Wilkie Collins | English writer noted for early detective novels (1824-1889) |
Conrad, Joseph Conrad | English novelist (born in Poland) noted for sea stories and for his narrative technique (1857-1924) |
Conrad Aiken | United States writer (1889-1973) |
Cooper, James Fenimore Cooper | United States novelist noted for his stories of American Indians and the frontier life (1789-1851) |
Daniel Defoe | English writer remembered particularly for his novel about Robinson Crusoe (1660-1731) |
Daphne du Maurier | English writer of melodramatic novels (1907-1989) |
Dashiell Hammett | United States writer of hard-boiled detective fiction (1894-1961) |
David Herbert Lawrence, D. H. Lawrence, Lawrence | English novelist and poet and essayist whose work condemned industrial society and explored sexual relationships (1885-1930) |
Donald Barthelme | United States author of sometimes surrealistic stories (1931-1989) |
Doris Lessing | English author of novels and short stories who grew up in Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe) (born in 1919) |
Dorothy L. Sayers | English writer of detective fiction (1893-1957) |
Dorothy Parker, Parker | United States writer noted for her sharp wit (1893-1967) |
Dostoevski, Dostoyevsky, Fedor Mikhailovich Dostoevski, Fiódor Dostoevsky, Fyodor Dostoevsky, Fyodor Dostoyevsky | Russian novelist who wrote of human suffering with humor and psychological insight (1821-1881) |
Dr. Seuss, Theodor Seuss Geisel | United States writer of children's books (1904-1991) |
E. L. Doctorow | United States novelist (born in 1931) |
Edgar Allan Poe, Poe | United States writer and poet (1809-1849) |
Edgar Rice Burroughs | United States novelist and author of the Tarzan stories (1875-1950) |
Edgar Wallace, Wallace | English writer noted for his crime novels (1875-1932) |
Edith Wharton | United States novelist (1862-1937) |
Edmond Hoyle | English writer on card games (1672-1769) |
Edna Ferber | United States novelist |
Edna O'Brien, O'Brien | Irish writer (born in 1932) |
Elias Canetti | English writer born in Germany (1905-1994) |
Elie Wiesel, Eliezer Wiesel | United States writer (born in Romania) who survived Nazi concentration camps and is dedicated to keeping alive the memory of the Holocaust (born in 1928) |
Elizabeth Gaskell | English writer who is remembered for her biography of Charlotte Bronte (1810-1865) |
Elmore Leonard, Leonard | United States writer of thrillers (born in 1925) |
Elwyn Brooks White | United States writer noted for his humorous essays (1899-1985) |
Emerson, Ralph Waldo Emerson | United States writer and leading exponent of transcendentalism (1803-1882) |
Eric Arthur Blair, George Orwell, Orwell | imaginative British writer concerned with social justice (1903-1950) |
Erica Jong | United States writer (born in 1942) |
Erle Stanley Gardner, Gardner | writer of detective novels featuring Perry Mason (1889-1970) |
Ernest Hemingway, Hemingway | An American writer of fiction who won the Nobel prize for literature in 1954 (1899-1961) |
Ernst Theodor Amadeus Hoffmann, E. T. A. Hoffmann | German writer of fantastic tales (1776-1822) |
Erskine Caldwell | United States author remembered for novels about poverty and degeneration (1903-1987) |
Esteve, Stephen | English writer (1832-1904) |
Eudora Welty | United States writer about rural southern life (1909-2001) |
Evelyn Waugh | English author of satirical novels (1903-1966) |
Ezra Pound | United States writer who lived in Europe |
Farrell | United States writer remembered for his novels (1904-1979) |
Fitzgerald, Francis Scott Key Fitzgerald, F. Scott Fitzgerald | United States author whose novels characterized the Jazz Age in the United States (1896-1940) |
Flannery O'Connor, O'Connor | United States writer (1925-1964) |
Ford Madox Ford | English writer and editor (1873-1939) |
Frances Hodgson Burnett | United States writer (born in England) remembered for her novels for children (1849-1924) |
Francois Mauriac | French novelist who wrote about the conflict between desire and religious belief (1885-1970) |
Frank Harris | Irish writer noted for his sexually explicit but unreliable autobiography (1856-1931) |
Frank Norris | United States writer (1870-1902) |
Franz Kafka, Kafka | Czech novelist who wrote in German about a nightmarish world of isolated and troubled individuals (1883-1924) |
Franz Werfel, Werfel | United States writer (1890-1945) |
François-Marie Arouet, Voltaire | French writer who was the embodiment of 18th century Enlightenment (1694-1778) |
Gai Petroni, Petroni | Roman satirist (died in 66) |
Gaius Plinius Secundus, Plini el Vell, Plini, Pliny | Roman author of an encyclopedic natural history |
George Eliot | British writer of novels characterized by realistic analysis of provincial Victorian society (1819-1880) |
George Sand | French writer known for works concerning women's rights and independence (1804-1876) |
George William Russell | Irish writer whose pen name was A.E. (1867-1935) |
Georges Simenon | French writer (born in Belgium) best known for his detective novels featuring Inspector Maigret (1903-1989) |
Gertrude Stein | experimental expatriate United States writer (1874-1946) |
Gore Vidal, Vidal | United States writer (born in 1925) |
Gorki, Maxim Gorki | Russian writer of plays and novels and short stories |
Graham Greene, Greene | English novelist and Catholic (1904-1991) |
Grey, Zane Grey | United States writer of western adventure novels (1875-1939) |
Gustave Flaubert | French writer of novels and short stories (1821-1880) |
Hardy, Thomas Hardy | English novelist and poet (1840-1928) |
Harold Nicolson, Sir Harold George Nicolson | English diplomat and author (1886-1968) |
Harriet Beecher Stowe | United States writer of a novel about slavery that advanced the abolitionists' cause (1811-1896) |
Hector Hugh Munro, Munros | British writer of short stories (1870-1916) |
Heinrich Boell | German novelist and writer of short stories (1917-1985) |
Helen Hunt Jackson | United States writer of romantic novels about the unjust / unjust / unjust treatment of Native Americans (1830-1885) |
Helen Keller, Keller | United States lecturer and writer who was blind and deaf from the age of 19 months |
Henry David Thoreau | United States writer and social critic (1817-1862) |
Henry Fielding | English novelist and dramatist (1707-1754) |
Henry James, James | writer who was born in the United States but lived in England (1843-1916) |
Henry Miller | United States novelist whose novels were originally / originally banned as pornographic (1891-1980) |
Herbert George Wells, H. G. Wells | prolific English writer / writer best known for his science-fiction novels |
Herman Melville, Melville | United States writer of novels and short stories (1819-1891) |
Herman Wouk | United States writer (born in 1915) |
Hermann Hesse, Hesse | Swiss writer (born in Germany) whose novels and poems express his interests in eastern spiritual values (1877-1962) |
Higginson | United States writer and soldier who led the first Black regiment in the Union Army (1823-1911) |
Hilaire Belloc | English author (born in France) remembered especially for his verse for children (1870-1953) |
Horace Walpole | English writer and historian |
Horatio Alger | United States author of inspirational adventure stories for boys |
Howard Pyle | United States writer and illustrator of children's books (1853-1911) |
Ian Fleming, Ian Lancaster Fleming | British writer famous for writing spy novels about secret agent James Bond (1908-1964) |
Iris Murdoch | British writer (born in Ireland) known primarily for her novels (1919-1999) |
Irving, John Irving | United States writer of darkly humorous novels (born in 1942) |
Irving, Washington Irving | United States writer remembered for his stories (1783-1859) |
Isaac Asimov | United States writer (born in Russia) noted for his science fiction (1920-1992) |
Isaac Bashevis Singer | United States writer (born in Poland) of Yiddish stories and novels (1904-1991) |
Isak Dinesen, Karen Blixen | Danish writer who lived in Kenya for 19 years and is remembered for her writings about Africa (1885-1962) |
Israel Zangwill | English writer (1864-1926) |
Ivan Turgenev | Russian writer of stories and novels and plays (1818-1883) |
Izaac Walton, Izaak Walton | English writer remember for his treatise on fishing / fishing (1593-1683) |
J. D. Salinger, Jerome David Salinger | United States writer (born 1919) |
Jack Kerouac | United States writer who was a leading figure of the beat generation (1922-1969) |
Jack London, John Griffith Chaney | United States writer of novels based on experiences in the Klondike gold rush (1876-1916) |
James Boswell | Scottish author noted for his biography of Samuel Johnson (1740-1795) |
James Branch Cabell | United States writer of satirical novels (1879-1958) |
James Joyce, Joyce | influential Irish writer noted for his many innovations / innovations (such as stream of consciousness writing) (1882-1941) |
James Michener | United States writer of historical novels (1907-1997) |
Jane Jacobs | United States writer and critic of urban planning (born in 1916) |
Jean-Jacques Rousseau, Rousseau | French philosopher and writer born in Switzerland |
Jean de La Fontaine, La Fontaine | French writer who collected Aesop's fables and published them (1621-1695) |
Jensen, Johannes Vilhelm Jensen | modernistic Danish writer (1873-1950) |
Jessica Mitford | United States writer (born in England) who wrote on American culture (1917-1996) |
Joan Didion | United States writer (born in 1934) |
Joel Chandler Harris | United States author who wrote the stories about Uncle Remus (1848-1908) |
John Addington Symonds | English writer (1840-1893) |
John Barth | United States novelist (born in 1930) |
John Bunyan | English preacher and author of an allegorical novel, Pilgrim's Progress (1628-1688) |
John Cowper Powys | British writer of novels about nature |
John Dos Passos | United States novelist remembered for his portrayal of life in the United States (1896-1970) |
John Galsworthy | English novelist (1867-1933) |
John Lyly | English writer noted for his elaborate style (1554-1606) |
John Ronald Reuel Tolkien, J.R.R. Tolkien, Tolkien | British philologist and writer of fantasies (born in South Africa) (1892-1973) |
John Steinbeck | United States writer noted for his novels about agricultural workers (1902-1968) |
John Updike | United States author (born 1932) |
Jorge Luis Borges | Argentinian writer remembered for his short stories (1899-1986) |
Joseph Heller | United States novelist whose best known work was a black comedy inspired by his experiences in the Air Force during World War II (1923-1999) |
Joyce Carol Oates | United States writer (born in 1938) |
Jules Verne, Verne | French writer who is considered the father of science fiction (1828-1905) |
Karl Gjellerup | Danish novelist (1857-1919) |
Katherine Anne Porter, Porter | United States writer of novels and short stories (1890-1980) |
Katherine Mansfield | New Zealand writer of short stories (1888-1923) |
Ken Kesey | United States writer whose best-known novel was based on his experiences as an attendant in a mental hospital (1935-2001) |
Kenneth Grahame | English writer (born in Scotland) of children's stories (1859-1932) |
Knut Hamsun, Knut Pedersen | Norwegian writer of novels (1859-1952) |
Kurt Vonnegut | United States writer whose novels and short stories are a mixture of realism and satire and science fiction (born in 1922) |
L. Ron Hubbard | A United States writer of science fiction and founder of Scientology (1911-1986) |
La Rochefoucauld | French writer of moralistic maxims (1613-1680) |
Langston Hughes | United States writer (1902-1967) |
Laurence Sterne | English writer (born in Ireland) (1713-1766) |
Lawrence Durrell | English writer of Irish descent who spent much of his life in Mediterranean regions (1912-1990) |
Leigh Hunt | British writer who defended the Romanticism of Keats and Shelley (1784-1859) |
Leo Tolstoy, Lev Tolstoi, Lleó Tolstoy, Tolstoy | Russian author remembered for two great novels (1828-1910) |
Lermontov | Russian writer (1814-1841) |
Liam O'Flaherty | Irish writer of short stories (1896-1984) |
Louis Aragon | French writer who generalized surrealism to literature (1897-1982) |
Louis Auchincloss | United States writer (born in 1917) |
Lucy Maud Montgomery | Canadian novelist (1874-1942) |
Malcolm Lowry | English novelist (1909-1957) |
Malraux | French novelist (1901-1976) |
Margaret Mitchell | United States writer noted for her novel about the South during the American Civil War (1900-1949) |
Mario Vargas Llosa, Vargas Llosa | Peruvian writer (born in 1936) |
Mark Twain, Samuel Langhorne Clemens | United States writer and humorist best known for his novels about Tom Sawyer and Huckleberry Finn (1835-1910) |
Marqués de Sade, Sade | French soldier and writer whose descriptions of sexual perversion gave rise to the term 'sadism' (1740-1814) |
Marshall McLuhan | Canadian writer noted for his analyses of the mass media (1911-1980) |
Mary McCarthy, McCarthy | United States satirical novelist and literary critic (1912-1989) |
Mary Shelley | English writer who created Frankenstein's monster and married Percy Bysshe Shelley (1797-1851) |
Mary Wollstonecraft | English writer and early feminist who denied male supremacy and advocated equal education for women |
Maupassant | French writer noted especially for his short stories (1850-1893) |
Maurois | French writer best known for his biographies (1885-1967) |
Max Beerbohm | English writer and caricaturist (1872-1956) |
Michael Ondaatje | Canadian writer (born in Sri Lanka in 1943) |
Mickey Spillane | United States writer of popular detective novels (born in 1918) |
Montaigne | French writer regarded as the originator of the modern essay (1533-1592) |
Mordecai Richler | Canadian novelist (born in 1931) |
Muriel Spark | Scottish writer of satirical novels (born in 1918) |
Nadine Gordimer | South African novelist and short-story writer / writer whose work describes the effects of apartheid (born in 1923) |
Nancy Mitford | English writer of comic novels (1904-1973) |
Nash, Ogden Nash | United States writer noted for his droll epigrams (1902-1971) |
Nathaniel Hawthorne | United States writer of novels and short stories mostly on moral themes (1804-1864) |
Nelson Algren | United States writer (1909-1981) |
Nevil Shute | English writer who settled in Norway after World War II (1899-1960) |
Ngaio Marsh | New Zealand writer of detective stories (1899-1982) |
Norman Mailer | United States writer (born in 1923) |
O. Henry, Porter | United States writer of short stories whose pen name was O. Henry (1862-1910) |
Oliver Goldsmith | Irish writer of novels and poetry and plays and essays (1728-1774) |
Oliver Wendell Holmes | United States writer of humorous essays (1809-1894) |
Oscar Wilde, Wilde | Irish writer and wit (1854-1900) |
Owen Wister | United States writer (1860-1938) |
P. G. Wodehouse | English writer known for his humorous novels and stories (1881-1975) |
Patrick Victor Martindale White, Patrick White | Australian writer (1912-1990) |
Paul Heyse, Paul Johann Ludwig von Heyse | German writer (1830-1914) |
Pearl Buck, Pearl Sydenstricker Buck | United States author whose novels drew on her experiences as a missionary in China / China (1892-1973) |
Percy, Walker Percy | United States writer whose novels explored human alienation (1916-1990) |
Philip Roth | United States writer whose novels portray middle-class Jewish life (born in 1933) |
Plini el Jove | Roman writer and nephew of Pliny the Elder |
Rabindranath Tagore, Tagore | Indian writer and philosopher whose poetry (based on traditional Hindu themes) pioneered the use of colloquial Bengali (1861-1941) |
Radclyffe Hall | English writer whose novel about a lesbian relationship was banned in Britain for many years (1883-1943) |
Ralph Ellison | United States novelist who wrote about a young Black man and his struggles in American society (1914-1994) |
Ray Bradbury | United States writer of science fiction (born 1920) |
Rebecca West | British writer (born in Ireland) (1892-1983) |
Richard Wright, Wright | United States writer whose work is concerned with the oppression / oppression of African Americans (1908-1960) |
Ring Lardner | United States humorist and writer of satirical short stories (1885-1933) |
Robert A. Heinlein, Robert Anson Heinlein | United States writer of science fiction (1907-1988) |
Robert Benchley, Robert Charles Benchley | United States humorist (1889-1945) |
Robert Graves | English writer known for his interest in mythology and in the classics (1895-1985) |
Robert Louis Stevenson | Scottish author (1850-1894) |
Robert Penn Warren, Warren | United States writer and poet (1905-1989) |
Rudyard Kipling | English author of novels and poetry who was born in India (1865-1936) |
S. S. Van Dine, Willard Huntington Wright | United States writer of detective novels (1888-1939) |
Salman Rushdie | British writer of novels who was born in India |
Samuel Butler | English novelist who described a fictitious land he called Erewhon (1835-1902) |
Samuel Johnson | English writer and lexicographer (1709-1784) |
Saul Bellow | United States author (born in Canada) whose novels influenced American literature after World War II (1915-2005) |
Schiller | German romantic writer (1759-1805) |
Sholem Asch | United States writer (born in Poland) who wrote in Yiddish (1880-1957) |
Sigrid Undset | Norwegian novelist (1882-1949) |
Sinclair Lewis | United States novelist who satirized middle-class America in his novel Main Street (1885-1951) |
Somerset Maugham, William Somerset Maugham, W. Somerset Maugham | English writer (born in France) of novels and short stories (1874-1965) |
Steele | English writer (1672-1729) |
Stefan Zweig | Austrian writer (1881-1942) |
Stephen Crane | United States writer (1871-1900) |
Stockton | United States writer (1834-1902) |
Susan Sontag | United States writer (born in 1933) |
Sylvia Plath | United States writer and poet (1932-1963) |
T. E. Lawrence, Thomas Edward Lawrence | Welsh soldier who from 1916 to 1918 organized the Arab revolt against the Turks |
Theodore Dreiser | United States novelist (1871-1945) |
Thomas De Quincey | English writer who described the psychological effects of addiction to opium (1785-1859) |
Thomas Malory | English writer who published a translation of romances / romances about King Arthur taken from French and other sources (died in 1471) |
Thomas Mann | German writer concerned about the role of the artist in bourgeois society (1875-1955) |
Thomas Merton | United States religious and writer (1915-1968) |
Thomas More | English statesman who opposed Henry VIII's divorce from Catherine of Aragon and was imprisoned and beheaded |
Thomas Nelson Page | United States diplomat and writer about the Old South (1853-1922) |
Thomas Pynchon | United States writer of pessimistic novels about life in a technologically advanced society (born in 1937) |
Thomas Wolfe, Tom Wolfe | United States writer who has written extensively on American culture (born in 1931) |
Thomas Wolfe | United States writer best known for his autobiographical novels (1900-1938) |
Thornton Niven Wilder, Thornton Wilder | United States writer and dramatist (1897-1975) |
Tobias Smollett | Scottish writer of adventure novels (1721-1771) |
Upton Sinclair | United States writer whose novels argued for social reform (1878-1968) |
Virginia Woolf | English author whose work used such techniques as stream of consciousness and the interior monologue |
Vladimir Nabokov | United States writer (born in Russia) (1899-1977) |
Walter Scott | British author of historical novels and ballads (1771-1832) |
Ward | English writer of novels who was an active opponent of the women's suffrage movement (1851-1920) |
Wilhelm Grimm | The younger of the two Grimm / Grimm brothers remembered best for their fairy stories (1786-1859) |
Willa Cather | United States writer who wrote about frontier life (1873-1947) |
William Dean Howells | United States writer and editor (1837-1920) |
William Golding | English novelist (1911-1993) |
William Makepeace Thackeray | English writer (born in India) (1811-1863) |
William S. Burroughs, William Seward Burroughs | United States writer noted for his works portraying the life of drug addicts (1914-1997) |
William Saroyan | United States writer of plays and short stories (1908-1981) |
William Styron | United States writer best known for his novels (born in 1925) |
Witold Gombrowicz | Polish author (1904-1969) |
Específic | assagista | A writer of literary works |
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autora, escriptora | A woman author |
biògraf | someone who writes an account of a person's life |
coautor | A writer who collaborates with others in writing something |
comediógraf, dramàtic, dramaturg | someone who writes plays |
comentarista | A writer who reports and analyzes events of the day |
delineant | A writer of a draft |
enciclopedista | A person who compiles information (as for reference purposes) |
escriptor fantasma | A writer who gives the credit of authorship to someone else |
guionista | someone who writes scripts for plays or movies or broadcast dramas |
guionista | A writer of screenplays |
lletrista | A person who writes the words for songs |
llibretista | author of words to be set to music in an opera or operetta |
novel·lista | One who writes novels |
pamfletaire, pamfletista, panfletista | A writer of pamphlets (usually taking a partisan stand on public issues) |
periodista | A writer for newspapers and magazines |
poeta, versificador | A writer of poems (the term is usually reserved for writers of good poetry) |
polemista | A writer who argues in opposition to others (especially in theology) |
tràgic | A writer (especially a playwright) who writes tragedies |
General | comunicador, comunicant | A person who communicates with others |
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Anglès | writer, author |
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Espanyol | autora, autor, escritora, escritor |
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Noms | composició, escriptura | The act of creating written works |
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Verbs | compondre, escriure, integrar, redactar | produce a literary work |
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