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单词 shakespearean
释义

Shakespeareanadj.n.

Brit. /ʃeɪkˈspɪərɪən/, U.S. /ʃeɪkˈspɪriən/
Forms: Also Shakespearian, Shakspe(a)rian, -ean.
Etymology: < Shakespeare + -ean suffix.With the forms in -ian compare -ian suffix. The other variations follow the diversities of spelling of the poet's name. The spelling Shakspere, adopted in the first edition of this Dictionary, was advocated by Sir F. Madden on the ground of the signature in the poet's copy of Florio's Montaigne, and accepted by Dr. Furnivall and the New Shakspere Society; the standard form is now Shakespeare.
A. adj.
Of or pertaining to, or having the characteristics of William Shakespeare (1564–1616) or his dramatic and poetical productions.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > performance arts > drama > playwriting > [adjective] > specific playwright
Terentian1600
Sophocleana1644
Shakespeareana1754
Plautine1768
Aeschylean1783
Marlowish1798
Websterian1809
Euripidean1821
Aristophanic1827
Fletcherian1850
Marlowesque1884
Senecan1885
Jonsonian1886
Marlovian1887
Ibsenian1891
Ibsenish1893
Pinerotic1895
Shavian1904
bardolatrous1905
Ibsenesque1906
Strindbergian1913
Lylian1923
Chekhovian1925
Sheridanesque1931
Brechtian1935
Vanbrughian1947
Stoppardian1978
society > leisure > the arts > literature > poetry > poet > poet by kind of poem > [adjective] > specific poets > specific English, Scottish, or American poets
Chaucerian1660
Miltonian1708
Miltonic1708
Popean1730
Shakespeareana1754
Darwinian1794
Spenseric1795
Wordsworthian1810
Southeyan1817
Spenserian1817
Byronian1822
Byronic1823
Byronish1830
Coleridgian1834
Chattertonian1838
Keatsian1845
Tennysonian1846
Shelleyana1849
Patmorean1855
Rossettian1861
Praedesque1865
Swinburnian1865
Byro nical1871
Browningese1880
Browningesque1880
Patmorial1880
Wordsworthy1880
Browningitec1882
Whitmanesque1882
Thomsonian1890
Burnsian1904
Praedian1905
Blakeian1906
Poundian1917
Thompsonian?1921
Whitmanisha1930
Whitmanian1948
Betjemanic1956
Betjeman1958
Betjemanesque1959
Betjemanish1959
Whitmannica1960
a1754 H. Fielding Jrnl. Voy. Lisbon (1755) 100 A poetic, if not a Shakespearian genius.
1805 C. Wilmot Let. 4 Aug. in M. Wilmot & C. Wilmot Russ. Jrnls. (1934) ii. 164 I rooted out Hamlet's Garden..& got into a Shakespearian tantrum at finding myself in the place.
1817 J. Keats Wks. (1889) III. 10 The acting of Kean is Shakespearian.
1820 S. T. Coleridge Lett. (1836) I. 49 The almost Shakespearian old witch-wives at the funeral [in Scott's Bride of Lammermoor].
1886 C. E. Pascoe London of To-day (ed. 3) xxxiv. 304 The Princess's Theatre, in the days of Charles Kean famous for its Shakesperian revivals.
B. n.
An authority on or student of the writings of Shakespeare; a Shakespearean scholar. Also, one who believes that Shakespeare wrote the plays usually attributed to him; an imitator of Shakespeare's style, one of his school; an admirer of Shakespeare's works.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > literature > poetry > study of poetry > [noun] > study of Shakespeare > one who
Shakespearean1837
society > leisure > the arts > performance arts > drama > playwriting > [noun] > playwright > authority on specific writer
Shakespearean1837
society > leisure > the arts > performance arts > drama > playwriting > [noun] > playwright > believer in Shakespeare's authorship
Shakespearean1837
Stratfordian1908
Shakespearite1909
society > leisure > the arts > performance arts > drama > playwriting > [noun] > playwright > imitation of specific writer > admirer or imitator of specific writer
Shakespearean1837
Marlovian1885
Ibsenite1889
Ibsenist1891
bardolater1903
Shavian1905
Brechtian1959
society > leisure > the arts > literature > literary and textual criticism > textual criticism > [noun] > literary origin of text > specific authorship theory > one who holds
Unitarian1850
chorizontes1868
chorizontist1873
Baconian1874
Shakespearean1874
separatist1903
Stratfordian1908
Shakespearite1909
Oxfordian1930
1837 J. G. Lockhart Mem. Life Scott II. viii. 294 She was, however, about as devout a Shakspearian as her nephew.
1874 N.Y. Herald 19 Sept. 11/3 It appears to me that considerable blank ammunition has been wasted in this ridiculous war between the Baconians and the Shakespearians.
1912 E. Nesbit Let. in D. L. Moore E. Nesbit (1933) xv. 268 Are you a Baconian or a Shakespearean?
1930 N. Streatfeild Ballet Shoes iii. 38 We'll read some more one day. I'll make a Shakespearean of you.
1964 Eng. Stud. 45 353 It also establishes the negative method of praising Heywood, as a minor Shakespearian.
1971 Daily Tel. 8 Mar. 10/4 One of those devoted Shakespeareans who knows his author backwards.
1979 F. Kermode Genesis of Secrecy iv. 79 Shakespearians may find explanations of the mysteriousness..of Hamlet, by considering instead the ur-Hamlet.

Derivatives

Shakeˈspeareanism n. (a) a form of expression peculiar to or imitated from Shakespeare ( Cent. Dict. 1891, and in later dictionaries); (b) the imitation of Shakespeare, or the effects of his influence generally.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > literature > poetry > poetic diction > [noun] > language or expression of specific poet
Miltonism1802
Byronism1817
Shelleyism1822
Shakespearism1823
Tennysonianism1843
Virgilianism1850
Swinburnism1868
Swinburnianism1869
Browningese1880
Shakespeareanism1886
Whitmanism1889
Horatian1891
Whitmanese1893
Tennysonianness1915
Praedism1927
Horatianism1936
Miltonicism1936
society > leisure > the arts > literature > poetry > poet > admiration or imitation of specific poet > [noun]
Pindarism1713
Wordsworthianism1829
Byronism1857
Shakespearolatry1864
Goethianism1880
Petrarchism1881
Shakespeareanism1886
Whitmania1887
Omarianism1897
Omarism1898
bardolatry1901
Petrarchanism1927
Miltonizing1936
1886 Contemp. Rev. Aug. 250 I think that the spirit of modern Shakspearianism, among readers, critics, and actors, is quite false to Shakspeare himself.
1908 Daily Chron. 21 Mar. 5/1 But Shakespeareanism is not dead yet a while.
Shakeˈspeareanly adv. in a Shakespearean manner.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > performance arts > drama > playwriting > [adverb] > specific playwright
Shakespeareanly1861
1861 Sat. Rev. 30 Nov. 557/2 ‘The national pulse beats Shaksperianly.’ So at least says Mr. James Orchard Halliwell in one of two circulars..which have lately reached us about ‘the National Shaksperian Fund’.
1890 Merry England July 242 A fine, Shakespearianly virile bit of poetry.
1921 G. B. Shaw in John Keats Memorial Volume 176 The lines beginning (Shakespearianly) with How fever'd is the man who cannot look Upon his mortal days with temperate blood!
1953 John o' London's Weekly 12 June 520/4 A musical piece, with Arthur Askey..Shakespeareanly disguised. It was called The Kid from Stratford.
Shakespeariˈana n. (see -iana suffix).
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > literature > poetry > study of poetry > [noun] > matters or works connected with specific poet
Shakespeariana1718
Keatsiana1818
Tennysoniana1866
Shelleyana1886
Wordsworthiana1888
society > leisure > the arts > performance arts > drama > playwriting > [noun] > playwright > anecdotes or objects relating to specific writer
Shakespeariana1718
Sheridaniana1826
Shaviana1927
1718 C. Gildon Compl. Art Poetry I. 305 Shakespeariana: or Select Moral Reflections, Topicks, Similies, and Descriptions from Shakespear.
1863 H. Bohn Lowndes' Bibliogr. Man. viii. Pref. 4 The volumes written respecting him, commonly called Shakespeariana.
1865 F. Thimm (title) Shakespeariana from 1564 to 1864.
1955 Times 3 Aug. 9/5 One such foundation has for many years placed a standing order for the purchase of Shakespeariana offered at our leading sale rooms.
1964 Economist 11 Apr. 144/3 The appetite for Shakespeareana.
Shakeˈspearianizing n. the action or an instance of imitating passages from the works of Shakespeare.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > performance arts > drama > playwriting > [noun] > playwright > imitation of specific writer
Senecanism1934
Shakespearianizing1936
1936 F. R. Leavis Revaluation vi. 223 The Cenci..is full of particular echoes of Shakespeare... This Shakespearianizing..is..quite damning.
ˈShakespearism n. = Shakespeareanism n. (a).
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > literature > poetry > poetic diction > [noun] > language or expression of specific poet
Miltonism1802
Byronism1817
Shelleyism1822
Shakespearism1823
Tennysonianism1843
Virgilianism1850
Swinburnism1868
Swinburnianism1869
Browningese1880
Shakespeareanism1886
Whitmanism1889
Horatian1891
Whitmanese1893
Tennysonianness1915
Praedism1927
Horatianism1936
Miltonicism1936
society > leisure > the arts > performance arts > drama > playwriting > [noun] > playwright > principles or style of specific writer
Marlowism1593
Shakespearism1823
Ibsenism1890
1823 C. Lamb Let. 19 May (1935) II. 387 In the same collection I find several Shaksperisms.
1903 G. B. Shaw Let. 12 Jan. (1972) II. 303 Ben Jonson never could quite get over the absurdity of the Shakespearisms which he knew so well at the Mermaid passing off in cold ink as literature.
ˈShakespearite n. a person who believes that Shakespeare wrote the plays traditionally attributed to him.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > performance arts > drama > playwriting > [noun] > playwright > believer in Shakespeare's authorship
Shakespearean1837
Stratfordian1908
Shakespearite1909
society > leisure > the arts > literature > literary and textual criticism > textual criticism > [noun] > literary origin of text > specific authorship theory > one who holds
Unitarian1850
chorizontes1868
chorizontist1873
Baconian1874
Shakespearean1874
separatist1903
Stratfordian1908
Shakespearite1909
Oxfordian1930
1909 ‘M. Twain’ Is Shakespeare Dead? v. 50 Two of these cults are known as the Shakespearites and the Baconians... The Shakespearite knows that Shakespeare wrote Shakespeare's Works.
ˈShakespearize v. (transitive) to imbue with the spirit or ideas of Shakespeare; intransitive to imitate Shakespeare.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > literature > poetry > poet > admiration or imitation of specific poet > imitate specific poet [verb (intransitive)]
Petrarchize1593
Pindarize1662
Homerize1765
Skeltonize1822
Byronize1823
Shakespearize1837
Whitmanize1902
Miltonize1903
society > leisure > the arts > literature > poetry > poet > admiration or imitation of specific poet > invest with character of or imitate specific poet [verb (transitive)]
Byronize1823
Shakespearize1837
Homerize1874
Miltonize1893
Tennysonize1910
1837 R. W. Emerson Oration before Phi Beta Kappa Soc. 10 The English dramatic poets have Shakespearized now for two hundred years.
1850 R. W. Emerson Shakspeare in Representative Men v. 201 Now, literature, philosophy, and thought, are Shakspearized.
Shakespeaˈrolater n. a worshipper of Shakespeare.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > literature > literary world > [noun] > imitation or admiration of specific writer > follower or student of specific writer
Tacitist1656
Johnsonian1778
Richardsonian1778
Miltonist1830
Voltairean1842
Dickensite1849
Shakespearolater1875
Cervantist1881
Rabelaisian1882
Dickensian1885
Peacockian1886
Zolaist1886
Meredithian1892
Hardyan1896
Janeite1896
Stevensonian1897
Kiplingite1898
Hazlittian1902
Austenite1903
Balzacian1905
Shavian1905
Boswellian1908
Jacobite1909
Thackerayan1909
Trollopian1910
Wellsian1916
Proustian1919
Sitwellian1920
Pirandellist1925
Thoreauvian1927
Walpolian1927
Austenian1928
Stendhalian1928
Poeist1929
Morrisite1936
Joycean1938
Wodehousian1939
Lucianist1940
Woolfian1944
Leavisite1946
Jamesian1954
Yeatsian1954
Leavisian1955
Lawrentian1957
Lawrentian1959
Beckettian1965
Orwellian1971
society > leisure > the arts > literature > poetry > poet > admiration or imitation of specific poet > [noun] > admirer or imitator of specific poet
Homerist1599
Homeriana1604
Ronsardian1697
Popean1730
Miltonian1748
Pindarist1781
Wordsworthian1812
Petrarchist1823
Byronist1830
papista1849
Goethian1850
Tennysonian1850
Shakespearolater1875
Ronsardist1877
Shelleyite1881
Browningitec1882
Byronian1883
Byronite1884
Shelleyan1886
Whitmanite1887
Keatsian1891
Spenserian1894
Omarian1897
Racinian1898
bardolater1903
Petrarchan1904
Burnsite1909
Thompsonian1913
Omarite1918
Burnsian1920
Shelleyist1934
Whitmanist1934
Dickinsonian1936
Poundian1950
Chattertonian1956
Whitmaniac1959
Whitmanian1977
society > leisure > the arts > literature > poetry > study of poetry > [noun] > poetolatry > one who > specific
Shakespearolater1875
1875 L. Tollemache in Fortn. Rev. Mar. 335 The strained efforts of the Shakespearolaters to find dramatic propriety in the most inappropriate passages.
Shakespeaˈrolatry n. worship of Shakespeare.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > literature > poetry > poet > admiration or imitation of specific poet > [noun]
Pindarism1713
Wordsworthianism1829
Byronism1857
Shakespearolatry1864
Goethianism1880
Petrarchism1881
Shakespeareanism1886
Whitmania1887
Omarianism1897
Omarism1898
bardolatry1901
Petrarchanism1927
Miltonizing1936
society > leisure > the arts > literature > poetry > study of poetry > [noun] > poetolatry > specific
Shakespearolatry1864
1864 Realm 9 Mar. 6 In these days of Shakspearolatry.
Shakespeaˈrology n. the branch of study concerned with the works and life of Shakespeare.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > literature > poetry > study of poetry > [noun] > study of Shakespeare
Shakespearology1862
society > leisure > the arts > performance arts > drama > playwriting > [noun] > playwright > study of specific writer
Shakespearology1862
1862 Daily Tel. 20 Jan. The most commendable act performed of late years in Shakespeareology.
This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1986; most recently modified version published online June 2022).
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adj.n.1718
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