释义 |
Definition of picaro in English: picaronounPlural picaros ˈpɪkərəʊˈpēkərō A rogue. 无赖 the main character is a picaro who lives by his wits Example sentencesExamples - 40 Poems, ballads, and images suggested an American picaro, a raffish trickster and canny businessman, whose slick tongue and sharp wit made him impossible to trust fully.
- It introduces a new approach which offers the possibility of taking the idea of the ‘other’ as scapegoat and also as a means for redemption as a defining characteristic of the picaro.
- The picaro's constant movement symbolizes his desire for social improvement, or perhaps even for escape from an island-prison.
- The traditional picaresque frame, with its fictitious first person voice, offers its authors the opportunity to scrutinize society ostensibly from another's perspective-the picaro's.
- As the picaro physically travels, he emotionally and intellectually proceeds from innocence to disillusionment; desengaño, of course, is also a sentiment that permeates baroque texts.
Synonyms scoundrel, villain, rogue, rascal, brute, animal, weasel, snake, monster, ogre, wretch, devil, good-for-nothing, reprobate, wrongdoer, evil-doer
OriginEarly 17th century: from Spanish. Definition of picaro in US English: picaronounˈpēkərō A rogue. 无赖 the main character is a picaro who lives by his wits Example sentencesExamples - The traditional picaresque frame, with its fictitious first person voice, offers its authors the opportunity to scrutinize society ostensibly from another's perspective-the picaro's.
- 40 Poems, ballads, and images suggested an American picaro, a raffish trickster and canny businessman, whose slick tongue and sharp wit made him impossible to trust fully.
- It introduces a new approach which offers the possibility of taking the idea of the ‘other’ as scapegoat and also as a means for redemption as a defining characteristic of the picaro.
- As the picaro physically travels, he emotionally and intellectually proceeds from innocence to disillusionment; desengaño, of course, is also a sentiment that permeates baroque texts.
- The picaro's constant movement symbolizes his desire for social improvement, or perhaps even for escape from an island-prison.
Synonyms scoundrel, villain, rogue, rascal, brute, animal, weasel, snake, monster, ogre, wretch, devil, good-for-nothing, reprobate, wrongdoer, evil-doer
OriginEarly 17th century: from Spanish. |