e ea eb ec ed ee ef eg eh ei ej ek el em en eo ep eq er es et eu ev ew ex ey

Перевод: epigram speek epigram


[существительное]
сентенция ; остроумная сентенция; эпиграмма


Тезаурус:

  1. Because his refusal to be sincere about his feelings toward her leads her further away from her own values, she begins to resent the way in which he constantly gives her the linguistic slip: "Concepts which still meant much to her, by which she had once lived, were swerved aside with a smart epigram, a pun, a quotation, a dirty story" (170).
  2. Ackroyd includes the epigram (which sounds more Wildean than Dickensian) simply so that he can disprove it, but these free-form gobbets never look like more than irrelevant scratchings of a creative itch.
  3. His silence about the authorship of the more famous epigram thus amounts almost to a denial that Simonides wrote it.
  4. His picture is not given, either by Pausanias or in the epigram, supposed to be by Simon ides, inscribed on the wall beneath it, the name Iliupersis , Sack of Troy, the title of several early poems and a correct description of the archaic vase-pictures.
  5. When I read Ash, I think of the younger Coleridge, reciting with gusto his epigram upon Donne:
  6. If asked the source of this little-known epigram, smile mysteriously and remain silent.
  7. Jonathan Swift, for example, produced the following epigram on Stephen Duck's advancement:
  8. An introductory epigram states that Clearchus copied them exactly in Delphi and brought them to this remote place of Bactriana.
  9. The aspiration after this effect is very ancient, as we know from the Greek derivation common to both "epigram" and "epitaph".
  10. He would end his lecture with a summarizing epigram.
  11. Later, as the stone-cutters developed their skill and as the "epigram" (which originally simply meant an inscription) became a literary art form, epigrams became more diffuse.
  12. I contrasted two quotations: an epigram of Goethe, saying that through reading Plutarch he learned that we were all human beings, and a passage from Hegel denying that we can ever understand the men of classical Antiquity because they represent a different stage in the evolution of the human mind.
  13. In the epigram it is "the citadel of Ilium taken", and Pausanias calls it "Troy taken and the departure of the Greeks"; and so the description shows it to have been - not the night of terror but the morning after.

LMBomber - программа для запоминания иностранных слов

Copyright © Perevod-Translate.ru