释义 |
[ dih-kam-er-uhn ] / dɪˈkæm ər ən /
nouna collection of 100 tales (1353) by Boccaccio. OTHER WORDS FROM Decameron, TheDe·cam·er·on·ic [dih-kam-uh-ron-ik], /dɪˌkæm əˈrɒn ɪk/, adjectiveDictionary.com UnabridgedBased on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2020 Example sentences from the Web for Decameron, TheHeavier even than a knapsack containing a spirit kettle and a Decameron and biscuit remainders in a paper bag, it must be. The Lee Shore|Rose Macaulay The Filostrato soon followed; and here for the first time we find the future author of the Decameron. Renaissance in Italy: Italian Literature|John Addington Symonds At five o'clock teas she loved to speak to pious ladies of Boccaccio and the Decameron, to the vexation of her Mamma. The German Classics of the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries, Volume 11|Friedrich Spielhagen The remorseless but light satire of the Decameron spares none of the ideals of the age. Renaissance in Italy: Italian Literature|John Addington Symonds
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