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单词 neoclassical
释义

neoclassicaladj.

Brit. /ˌniːə(ʊ)ˈklasᵻkl/, U.S. /ˌnioʊˈklæsək(ə)l/
Origin: Formed within English, by compounding. Etymons: neo- comb. form, classical adj. and n.
Etymology: < neo- comb. form + classical adj. and n. Compare slightly later neoclassic adj.
1. Of, relating to, characteristic of, or designating a style of art, architecture, music, literature, etc., that is based on or influenced by classical models, or a style that has become established as ‘classical’. Used esp. with reference to such styles in 18th cent. literature, late 18th cent. art and architecture, or 20th cent. music. See also neoclassicism n.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > the arts in general > [adjective] > specific movement or period
classical1546
pastoral1566
classic1597
Medicean1652
romantic1812
tedesco1814
realistic1829
realista1832
pseudo-classic1833
classicist1838
pseudo-classical1838
renaissant1839
modernist1848
post-classic1850
post-classical1851
pseudo-Gothic1853
classicizing1865
classicistic1866
serio-grotesque1873
geometric1877
neoclassical1877
modernistic1878
neoclassic1878
pseudo-archaic1878
William Morris1883
protocorinthian1884
veristic1884
William and Mary1886
Yuan1888
romanticistic1889
veritistic1894
auto-destructive1895
pre-Romantic1895
Trajanic1906
neo-realistic1909
New Romantic1909
neo-realist1912
futuristic1915
postmodern1916
Dada1918
Dadaist1918
surrealist1918
proto-Romantic1920
expressionistic1921
modernista1924
super-realist1925
superrealistic1925
postmodernist1926
proto-Baroque1926
post-symbolist1927
pre-modernist1927
surrealistic1930
Renaissancist1932
Colonial Revival1934
neo-baroque1935
socialist-realist1935
social realist1949
social realistic1949
kitchen sink1954
William IV1955
formalistic1957
Zhdanovite1957
neo-Dadaist1960
neo-modernist1960
William Morrisy1960
neo-Dada1962
Zhdanovist1966
conceptual1969
conceptualist1973
po-mo1987
pathetic1990
society > leisure > the arts > literature > literary world > [adjective] > literary movement, school, or theory
classic1743
classical1784
Alexandrian1803
romantic1812
realistic1829
realista1832
romanticist1831
symbolistic1864
symbolistical1864
neo-romantic1875
naturalistic1876
Alexandrine1877
neoclassical1877
veristic1884
impressionistic1886
impressionary1889
romanticistic1889
sensitivist1891
veritistic1894
Félibrian1908
symbolic1910
vorticist1914
Dada1918
Dadaist1918
surrealist1918
postmodernist1926
surrealistic1930
ultraist1931
socialist-realist1935
lettrist1947
social realist1949
social realistic1949
formalist1955
society > leisure > the arts > visual arts > architecture > style of architecture > [adjective] > classical and neo-classical
all'antica1605
Palladian1731
Vitruvian1762
Adamatic1776
Corinthianesque1837
Adam1846
Corinthianizing1846
Pompeian1869
neoclassical1933
neo-Palladian1940
1877 Contemp. Rev. Feb. 360 The imagination of the men of Spenser's time was affected by his use of the neo-classical mythology of the Renaissance.
1882 E. R. Pitman Mission Life in Greece 42 The written [modern Greek] is a form of the ancient, called neo-classical.
1925 W. W. Worster tr. E. Hannover Pottery & Porcelain III. xiii. 279 In the biscuit figures and groups of Vincennes we find..traces of the growing neo-classical movement.
1933 Archit. Rev. 74 79/2 Many is the ill-built block of London flats whose internal planning has been sacrificed for some ponderous neo-classical façade.
1934 C. Lambert Music Ho! ii. 101 Stravinsky's neo-classical period,..apart from the adoption of eighteenth-century forms and titles, is chiefly noticeable for its attempt to create melody by synthetic means.
1964 J. Summerson Classical Lang. Archit. v. 37/1 The Panthéon is the first major building which can be called neo-classical—‘neo-classical’ being the expression which has come to be used for architecture which..tends towards the rational simplification advocated by Cordemoy and Laugier and..seeks to present the orders with the utmost antiquarian fidelity.
1979 Oxf. Jun. Compan. Mus. (ed. 2) 269/2 His [sc. Poulenc's] style was neo-classical, full of unexpected twists and delightful ‘wrong-note’ harmonies.
1986 Down Beat Sept. 6/3 It seems like jazz is undergoing a period of ‘neoclassical’ conservatism.
1996 Independent 4 Nov. i. 9/2 But a fork beyond the stone gate piers leads past a ‘private’ sign and under trees, to reveal the neo-classical villa across a damp lawn.
2. Economics. Of, relating to, or characteristic of a body of theory primarily concerned with supply and demand rather than with the source and distribution of wealth. Also: designating this body of theory and economists who propound or subscribe to it.
ΘΚΠ
society > trade and finance > management of money > management of national resources > [adjective] > of or relating to specific theories or doctrines
physiocratical1789
Smithian1801
physiocratic1804
protective1822
Ricardian1824
cameralistic1831
Marshallian1894
monetarist1914
Paretian1916
neoclassical1926
marginalist1929
Keynesian1931
underconsumptionist1936
pre-Keynesian1939
Walrasian1942
trickle-down1944
neo-Keynesian1947
Schumpeterian1950
structuralist1962
monetaristic1972
market fundamentalist1997
1926 Amer. Jrnl. July 158 Its most interesting feature is the reassertion of the neo-classical ‘marginal’ interpretation of value.
1974 Times Lit. Suppl. 15 Mar. 259/4 Throughout the book—as for example in the emphasis on jobs rather than on the ownership of capital as a key determinant in occupational mobility—the authors assume the validity of neo-classical economics as taught in the United States.
1992 Skeptical Inquirer Summer 378/1 The neoclassical economists and messianic politicians..indulge in the luxury of repeating dogmas that either are untestable or have failed rigorous tests.

Derivatives

neoˈclassically adv.
ΚΠ
1934 Jrnl. Philos. 31 152 In this kind [of criticism], classification of the arts is irrelevant, for the undefined quality cuts across all classes; it may appear in a ‘confusion of arts’, neo-classically speaking.
1989 Chicago Tribune Mag. 10 Dec. 49/2 The parapetlike ornamentation and half-circle design in this neoclassically influenced facade are of granite.
This is a new entry (OED Third Edition, September 2003; most recently modified version published online March 2022).
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adj.1877
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