单词 | shakespearean |
释义 | Shakespeareanadj.n. 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). < adj.n.1718 |
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