释义 |
[ bahy-ron-ik ] / baɪˈrɒn ɪk /
adjectiveof or relating to Lord Byron. possessing the characteristics of Byron or his poetry, especially romanticism, melancholy, and melodramatic energy. Origin of ByronicFirst recorded in 1815–25; Byron + -ic OTHER WORDS FROM ByronicBy·ron·i·cal·ly, adverbBy·ron·ism [bahy-ruh-niz-uhm], /ˈbaɪ rəˌnɪz əm/, nounWords nearby ByronicByrnes, byrnie, by-road, Byron, Byron, George Gordon, Lord, Byronic, Byronic hero, byrrus, byssinosis, byssus, bystander Dictionary.com UnabridgedBased on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2020 Example sentences from the Web for ByronicAdam Mickiewicz waged a war for Polish independence on what were essentially Byronic principles. Poet and Rake, Lord Byron Was Also an Interventionist With Brains and Savvy|Michael Weiss|February 16, 2014|DAILY BEAST Edward, on the other hand, is a brooding, self-absorbed Byronic hero with ice-cold hands. Battle of the Twilight Heartthrobs|The Daily Beast|June 23, 2010|DAILY BEAST They exalted the unknown Disraeli out of sheer delight at his Byronic ability to irradiate everything with romance. George Du Maurier, the Satirist of the Victorians|T. Martin Wood The fact that Lola always wore a Byronic collar helped the theory, held by many, that she was a daughter of the poet. The Magnificent Montez|Horace Wyndham
It was at this juncture that the youth of many locks and ample Byronic shirt collar appeared on the scene. Kentucky in American Letters, v. 1 of 2|John Wilson Townsend There was Byronic pleasure in imagining the loneliness that would be his lot. The solitariness which exerted so potent a spell on Wordsworth had in it nothing ‘Byronic.’ Oxford Lectures on Poetry|Andrew Cecil Bradley
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