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Definition of Elizabethan in English: Elizabethanadjective ɪˌlɪzəˈbiːθ(ə)nəˌlɪzəˈbiθ(ə)n Relating to or characteristic of the reign of Queen Elizabeth I. (与)英国女王伊丽莎白一世(有关)的;(与)伊丽莎白女王一世时代特点(有关)的 an Elizabethan manor house 一座伊丽莎白一世时代的庄园主宅第。 Example sentencesExamples - Such sententiousness was much to Elizabethan taste.
- These days the field has broadened to include the niceties of life at Elizabethan court or Georgian cricketers in frills and breeches who invent the rules as they go along.
- Schemes for North American plantations also developed during Elizabethan times.
- Today, the Great Hall has regained its dignity and is home to Elizabethan banquets, weddings and other special events.
- Individual dressing rooms were not a feature of Elizabethan playhouses, so actors were to dress in whatever open space they could find.
- My stricture does not include Shakespeare and Elizabethan drama of course.
- It's not a disaster, but I can't imagine it having much appeal to anyone besides fans of Elizabethan drama.
- The actors in Julius Caesar wear a mixture of Elizabethan dress with ancient Roman embellishments added, as was more or less the way it was done in Shakespeare's day.
- It is repeatedly referred to in Elizabethan drama, and influenced the policy of Thomas Cromwell, Cecil, and Leicester.
- Kirby was again attired in the Elizabethan costume from dress rehearsal.
- Pupils from Old Palace school dressed up in Elizabethan costume to welcome visitors to the historic building.
- These books together give a comprehensive picture of Elizabethan sea power.
- Indeed, Elizabethan remedies against private fraud continued to operate through the first third of the eighteenth century.
- In other respects, however, the Union was far from being the unqualified blessing which Elizabethan apologists implied.
- In the ‘factional’ model of Elizabethan politics he has been seen as the rival of Burghley.
- After that, I'd written Tudor England, which led me to consider Elizabethan politics in far greater depth than I'd done before.
- Marlowe and Shakespeare dominated late Elizabethan drama, although they did not monopolize it.
- Late Renaissance and Elizabethan writers also found Vergil a good source of inspiration.
- He imagined the characters of Julius Caesar wearing Elizabethan dress, and equipped ancient Rome with a medieval invention - the mechanical clock.
- Despite the rather amusing sight of ladies in Elizabethan dress asking us to turn off our mobiles, I heard at least three during the course of the evening.
noun ɪˌlɪzəˈbiːθ(ə)nəˌlɪzəˈbiθ(ə)n A person alive during the reign of Queen Elizabeth I. (人,尤指作家)伊丽莎白女王一世时代的 Example sentencesExamples - Judiciously following Barthes (as I thought) on the relationship of sign and myth, and Foucault on the nature of discourse, it was possible to see that, for the Elizabethans, begging was the sign of poverty inverted.
- Although he was to gain a posthumous reputation as the last of the great Elizabethans, in his interest in colonization as in so many other things Ralegh was the exception that proves the rule.
- For example, out-of-doors, well-to-do Elizabethans wore two pairs of shoes, an inner slipper and the outer shoe, which required some practice to keep on while walking.
- The article referred to the ‘earlier Elizabethans… distinguished by their towering self-confidence.
- The name Sir Walter Ralegh conjures up images of gallant Elizabethans and daredevil mariners in small boats defying hordes of Spaniards.
- Hamlet's first diagnostic tool is a play: the neatness of the correspondence of play within play to the play itself is a typical example of the kind of ingenuity that delighted learned Elizabethans.
- Equally, the man she prefers to Glenthorn, Cecil Devereux, represents the next large wave of English immigrants, the Elizabethans.
- The adventurous Elizabethans brought many foreign plants back to England, especially roses and other decorative flowers, and tomatoes, which were thought to be an aphrodisiac.
- You can find an essay from 1925 by Virginia Woolf in which she concedes that the Americans, like the Elizabethans, have great powers at ‘coining new words.’
- The Elizabethans clothed this quest in poetry.
- Some of Seneca's stories that originated from the Greeks like Agamemnon and Thyestes which dealt with bloody family histories and revenge captivated the Elizabethans.
- As evidence of an external Catholic threat accumulated over the course of the 1570s, Elizabethans became increasingly aware of the instability of England's status as a Protestant nation.
- Sohmer's account of the ramifications of the calendrical discrepancy is fascinatingly detailed and he builds upon it with a second major insight: that the Bible was primarily an aural text for the Elizabethans.
- In fact, I find myself wondering if drinking games weren't invented at the Globe Theatre: I wouldn't put it past the Elizabethans.
- The Elizabethans distinguished between three different kinds of puns: antamaclasis, paranomasia, and syllepsis.
- Without being stilted or pedantic about it, Sontag sums up the history of stagecraft back to the Elizabethans.
- Acting was taught as part of a standard grammar-school education and of course actors had to be literate, so despite the apparent low status of the profession actors were amongst the better-educated Elizabethans.
- As youthful icons go, Marlowe is rather the more attractive of the two Elizabethans, somewhat resembling the archetype of James Dean or Jim Morrison by living dangerously and dying young.
- Throughout Lady Rebecca regaled members with interesting titbits and explanations of why the Elizabethans wore shifts, fur trimming, cuffs and ruffs etc.
- The Elizabethans discovered a strain of double-flowered primroses that were prized by collectors, and these are once again available, in limited numbers wherever primroses are sold.
Definition of Elizabethan in US English: Elizabethanadjectiveəˌlɪzəˈbiθ(ə)nəˌlizəˈbēTH(ə)n Relating to or characteristic of the reign of Queen Elizabeth I. (与)英国女王伊丽莎白一世(有关)的;(与)伊丽莎白女王一世时代特点(有关)的 a lady in Elizabethan dress Example sentencesExamples - It's not a disaster, but I can't imagine it having much appeal to anyone besides fans of Elizabethan drama.
- Marlowe and Shakespeare dominated late Elizabethan drama, although they did not monopolize it.
- Late Renaissance and Elizabethan writers also found Vergil a good source of inspiration.
- He imagined the characters of Julius Caesar wearing Elizabethan dress, and equipped ancient Rome with a medieval invention - the mechanical clock.
- Kirby was again attired in the Elizabethan costume from dress rehearsal.
- These days the field has broadened to include the niceties of life at Elizabethan court or Georgian cricketers in frills and breeches who invent the rules as they go along.
- Indeed, Elizabethan remedies against private fraud continued to operate through the first third of the eighteenth century.
- It is repeatedly referred to in Elizabethan drama, and influenced the policy of Thomas Cromwell, Cecil, and Leicester.
- Such sententiousness was much to Elizabethan taste.
- My stricture does not include Shakespeare and Elizabethan drama of course.
- Despite the rather amusing sight of ladies in Elizabethan dress asking us to turn off our mobiles, I heard at least three during the course of the evening.
- Today, the Great Hall has regained its dignity and is home to Elizabethan banquets, weddings and other special events.
- Individual dressing rooms were not a feature of Elizabethan playhouses, so actors were to dress in whatever open space they could find.
- Schemes for North American plantations also developed during Elizabethan times.
- Pupils from Old Palace school dressed up in Elizabethan costume to welcome visitors to the historic building.
- In other respects, however, the Union was far from being the unqualified blessing which Elizabethan apologists implied.
- The actors in Julius Caesar wear a mixture of Elizabethan dress with ancient Roman embellishments added, as was more or less the way it was done in Shakespeare's day.
- In the ‘factional’ model of Elizabethan politics he has been seen as the rival of Burghley.
- These books together give a comprehensive picture of Elizabethan sea power.
- After that, I'd written Tudor England, which led me to consider Elizabethan politics in far greater depth than I'd done before.
nounəˌlɪzəˈbiθ(ə)nəˌlizəˈbēTH(ə)n A person, especially a writer, of the time of Queen Elizabeth I. (人,尤指作家)伊丽莎白女王一世时代的 Example sentencesExamples - Equally, the man she prefers to Glenthorn, Cecil Devereux, represents the next large wave of English immigrants, the Elizabethans.
- As evidence of an external Catholic threat accumulated over the course of the 1570s, Elizabethans became increasingly aware of the instability of England's status as a Protestant nation.
- The article referred to the ‘earlier Elizabethans… distinguished by their towering self-confidence.
- Hamlet's first diagnostic tool is a play: the neatness of the correspondence of play within play to the play itself is a typical example of the kind of ingenuity that delighted learned Elizabethans.
- Without being stilted or pedantic about it, Sontag sums up the history of stagecraft back to the Elizabethans.
- As youthful icons go, Marlowe is rather the more attractive of the two Elizabethans, somewhat resembling the archetype of James Dean or Jim Morrison by living dangerously and dying young.
- The adventurous Elizabethans brought many foreign plants back to England, especially roses and other decorative flowers, and tomatoes, which were thought to be an aphrodisiac.
- Some of Seneca's stories that originated from the Greeks like Agamemnon and Thyestes which dealt with bloody family histories and revenge captivated the Elizabethans.
- Acting was taught as part of a standard grammar-school education and of course actors had to be literate, so despite the apparent low status of the profession actors were amongst the better-educated Elizabethans.
- Although he was to gain a posthumous reputation as the last of the great Elizabethans, in his interest in colonization as in so many other things Ralegh was the exception that proves the rule.
- The name Sir Walter Ralegh conjures up images of gallant Elizabethans and daredevil mariners in small boats defying hordes of Spaniards.
- The Elizabethans distinguished between three different kinds of puns: antamaclasis, paranomasia, and syllepsis.
- Sohmer's account of the ramifications of the calendrical discrepancy is fascinatingly detailed and he builds upon it with a second major insight: that the Bible was primarily an aural text for the Elizabethans.
- Throughout Lady Rebecca regaled members with interesting titbits and explanations of why the Elizabethans wore shifts, fur trimming, cuffs and ruffs etc.
- For example, out-of-doors, well-to-do Elizabethans wore two pairs of shoes, an inner slipper and the outer shoe, which required some practice to keep on while walking.
- In fact, I find myself wondering if drinking games weren't invented at the Globe Theatre: I wouldn't put it past the Elizabethans.
- You can find an essay from 1925 by Virginia Woolf in which she concedes that the Americans, like the Elizabethans, have great powers at ‘coining new words.’
- The Elizabethans clothed this quest in poetry.
- The Elizabethans discovered a strain of double-flowered primroses that were prized by collectors, and these are once again available, in limited numbers wherever primroses are sold.
- Judiciously following Barthes (as I thought) on the relationship of sign and myth, and Foucault on the nature of discourse, it was possible to see that, for the Elizabethans, begging was the sign of poverty inverted.
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