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单词 juvenilia
释义

Definition of juvenilia in English:

juvenilia

plural noun ˌdʒuːvəˈnɪlɪəˌdʒuvəˈnɪliə
  • Works produced by an author or artist while still young.

    from the juvenilia onward, certain themes were prominent
    five of Eliot's published juvenilia
    Example sentencesExamples
    • I had not worked on genetics since, as a Cambridge undergraduate, I had published juvenilia on polymorphisms maintained by single locus selection.
    • The result is that this sonata sounds less like juvenilia than it usually does.
    • But a remark by Evelyn Waugh about the juvenilia of Ronald Knox comes to mind, that only by ‘shameless and inept experiments’ does any writer achieve ‘mastery of a very difficult language’.
    • The appendix to the Complete Poems prints the two pieces of juvenilia that were published in Bunting's youth, both remarkably conventional given that Bunting knew and already admired Whitman.
    • Paramount to their success was this notion of ‘chemistry’: a complicated alchemy of juvenilia with sophistication and of actor to action.
    • We know there's good work and bad work but who, among Auden lovers for example, would want to be without his often amazing juvenilia?
    • They are belated juvenilia which ran contrary to this talent.
    • Joe would probably think I'm crazy for showing such juvenilia to the world.
    • The first two orchestral works (preceded only by juvenilia and a graduation passacaglia for piano) are remarkable for their assurance.
    • However, if these are to be published then there's good reason to reveal the juvenilia.
    • Similar expressions of libertarian ideals in Heinlein's juvenilia and other SF novels did leave their mark, though.
    • The exhibition opens with a section on Solomon's juvenilia, and shows him already with a voice of his own and a formidable technique.
    • These were not sketches or juvenilia; these were expansive statements made by an artist in her prime.
    • Jim's juvenilia, in general, are lacking in distinction, but they do chart a rapidly maturing interest in poetry.
    • Looked at in their own right, rather than from the perspective of Rothko's later achievements, the early works are not at all juvenilia; rather, they rank very respectably within American painting of the period.
    • What he would have felt about having his juvenilia resuscitated isn't difficult to work out.
    • , I figure the juvenilia of one band could do a lot worse than sound like the juvenilia of a superior one.
    • London's first chapter on the Brontes' juvenilia critiques the literary-critical construction of an individual, solitary author out of collaborative, adolescent writing practices.
    • Her adventures as a photographer were, she believed, an escape from huge, too-silent apartments, and teachers who thought her juvenilia brilliant.
    • It was fun, and certainly historic, but much of it also sounded like whimsical juvenilia.

Origin

Early 17th century: from Latin, neuter plural of juvenilis (see juvenile).

Rhymes

bougainvillea, Brasília, cilia, conciliar, familiar, haemophilia (US hemophilia), Hillier, memorabilia, paedophilia (US pedophilia), sedilia
 
 

Definition of juvenilia in US English:

juvenilia

plural nounˌjo͞ovəˈnilēəˌdʒuvəˈnɪliə
  • Works produced by an author or artist while still young.

    from the juvenilia onward, certain themes were prominent
    five of Eliot's published juvenilia
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Joe would probably think I'm crazy for showing such juvenilia to the world.
    • What he would have felt about having his juvenilia resuscitated isn't difficult to work out.
    • Looked at in their own right, rather than from the perspective of Rothko's later achievements, the early works are not at all juvenilia; rather, they rank very respectably within American painting of the period.
    • The exhibition opens with a section on Solomon's juvenilia, and shows him already with a voice of his own and a formidable technique.
    • These were not sketches or juvenilia; these were expansive statements made by an artist in her prime.
    • We know there's good work and bad work but who, among Auden lovers for example, would want to be without his often amazing juvenilia?
    • The result is that this sonata sounds less like juvenilia than it usually does.
    • Similar expressions of libertarian ideals in Heinlein's juvenilia and other SF novels did leave their mark, though.
    • Paramount to their success was this notion of ‘chemistry’: a complicated alchemy of juvenilia with sophistication and of actor to action.
    • , I figure the juvenilia of one band could do a lot worse than sound like the juvenilia of a superior one.
    • The appendix to the Complete Poems prints the two pieces of juvenilia that were published in Bunting's youth, both remarkably conventional given that Bunting knew and already admired Whitman.
    • It was fun, and certainly historic, but much of it also sounded like whimsical juvenilia.
    • The first two orchestral works (preceded only by juvenilia and a graduation passacaglia for piano) are remarkable for their assurance.
    • Jim's juvenilia, in general, are lacking in distinction, but they do chart a rapidly maturing interest in poetry.
    • I had not worked on genetics since, as a Cambridge undergraduate, I had published juvenilia on polymorphisms maintained by single locus selection.
    • London's first chapter on the Brontes' juvenilia critiques the literary-critical construction of an individual, solitary author out of collaborative, adolescent writing practices.
    • However, if these are to be published then there's good reason to reveal the juvenilia.
    • Her adventures as a photographer were, she believed, an escape from huge, too-silent apartments, and teachers who thought her juvenilia brilliant.
    • They are belated juvenilia which ran contrary to this talent.
    • But a remark by Evelyn Waugh about the juvenilia of Ronald Knox comes to mind, that only by ‘shameless and inept experiments’ does any writer achieve ‘mastery of a very difficult language’.

Origin

Early 17th century: from Latin, neuter plural of juvenilis (see juvenile).

 
 
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更新时间:2024/12/23 15:05:04