释义 |
Definition of classicist in English: classicistnoun ˈklasɪsɪstˈklæsəsəst 1A person who studies Classics (ancient Greek and Latin). (研究古希腊语、古拉丁语的)古典学者 Example sentencesExamples - Even writers who wanted to be thought of as classicists usually needed a Latin crib to help them through Greek poetry in this period.
- More and more, there's been a change in attitude among classicists toward translation as a legitimate activity.
- Traditionally, classicists explore topics that are contained within the sphere of ancient Greek or Roman societies.
- In literary interpretation, classicists warn us of the ‘documentary fallacy’, the impulse to treat fiction as if it recorded real events or characters from whom inferences can be drawn which have no basis in the text itself.
- He advises folklorists to look back to ancient literature and classicists to look forward to folklore methods.
- His relatively cheap, compact editions of Greek and Latin authors, aimed at professional classicists and keen amateurs alike, rapidly became popular.
- As a classicist, Tolkien was fascinated by the gaps in history.
- TV documentaries and publishers have deployed, for 15 minutes, platoons of academic classicists to reveal to us the shocking truth: the ancients were not interested in taking part; they only wanted the glory of winning.
- Educated at King Edward's School, Birmingham, he began as a classicist, was a fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge, and then professor of Greek at Sydney.
- But she did ask that we not describe her as a classicist (she studied classics) but now works in another field.
- Most classicists trace the advent of Greek democracy to the urban culture of Athens.
- Chapter 1 deals with sources which will be unfamiliar to all but classicists, and surveys the influence of various Greek conceptual models on the gender constructs of Rome in the last century BCE and first century CE.
- In recent years classicists and ancient historians have devoted renewed attention to the Archaic Age in Greece, the period from approximately the eighth century to the fifth century BC.
- There are several major contemporary schools of Platonic interpretation among classicists and philosophers, as well as, naturally, many individuals who do not fit in any particular school.
- A classicist might be tempted to note the Greek myth of Icarus, whose ambition and heedless self-confidence caused him to fly too close to the sun, which melted the wax holding together the feathers of his fabricated wings.
- This study remains as important to students of ancient history as to classicists.
- Keats laced his finest poetry with mythological allusions, as did the great German classicist and translator of Sophocles, Hölderlin.
- With one exception the contributions are authored by classicists, historians and archaeologists.
- The English classicist Housman said that in scholarship, accuracy is a duty, not a virtue.
- He was a brilliant classicist at school and won scholarships to Queen's University, but chose a career in medicine.
2A follower of classicism in the arts. 人文学科古典主义者 Example sentencesExamples - When it comes to pop songwriting, she is a classicist.
- How would you describe your life; would you call it a life of a concrete poet; of an artist; of a cultural classicist?
- Of course there were heroic modernist artists and writers who opposed twentieth-century totalitarianism, and classicists and traditionalists who supported totalitarianism.
- It is a classicist revenge drama that takes its time in becoming one, and is richer as a result.
- He thought of himself as ‘a classicist structurally, a romantic emotionally and a modernist harmonically’.
- A homegrown classicist, he presented an idealized side of desire that the ancient Greeks would have understood.
- He uses an architectural framework, as classicists do, to anchor the contents of the picture to the given horizontal and vertical of the support.
- The commission was clearly a turning point, representing a state of architectural flux; a decade later and he was a fully converted classicist in terms of both his funerary and domestic architecture.
- In another era, he would have been a strict classicist; as a young man in the early years of the twentieth century, he found his characteristic imagery in the logic of industrial America - its machine dreams.
- Ibsen would be a classicist, a romantic, a Scribean, a realist, a symbolist, not to mention a Hegelian and a feminist, before he would be an apocalyptic.
- This seems entirely fitting for a composer who has often been content to embrace classicist formal integration and resist modernist formal fragmentation.
- At the core a classicist, albeit with modernist leanings, he has not abandoned tradition but given the Toronto-based company a fresh image - youthful, creative and adventurous.
- He also wanted to juxtapose the accomplishments of different generations of artists and show that those who are considered classicists can sometimes think in more modern ways than their younger colleagues.
- New classicists are aiming to restore the pleasure of the arts.
Definition of classicist in US English: classicistnounˈklasəsəstˈklæsəsəst 1A person who studies Classics (ancient Greek and Latin). (研究古希腊语、古拉丁语的)古典学者 Example sentencesExamples - Educated at King Edward's School, Birmingham, he began as a classicist, was a fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge, and then professor of Greek at Sydney.
- He advises folklorists to look back to ancient literature and classicists to look forward to folklore methods.
- He was a brilliant classicist at school and won scholarships to Queen's University, but chose a career in medicine.
- But she did ask that we not describe her as a classicist (she studied classics) but now works in another field.
- This study remains as important to students of ancient history as to classicists.
- Chapter 1 deals with sources which will be unfamiliar to all but classicists, and surveys the influence of various Greek conceptual models on the gender constructs of Rome in the last century BCE and first century CE.
- A classicist might be tempted to note the Greek myth of Icarus, whose ambition and heedless self-confidence caused him to fly too close to the sun, which melted the wax holding together the feathers of his fabricated wings.
- With one exception the contributions are authored by classicists, historians and archaeologists.
- More and more, there's been a change in attitude among classicists toward translation as a legitimate activity.
- There are several major contemporary schools of Platonic interpretation among classicists and philosophers, as well as, naturally, many individuals who do not fit in any particular school.
- The English classicist Housman said that in scholarship, accuracy is a duty, not a virtue.
- TV documentaries and publishers have deployed, for 15 minutes, platoons of academic classicists to reveal to us the shocking truth: the ancients were not interested in taking part; they only wanted the glory of winning.
- Most classicists trace the advent of Greek democracy to the urban culture of Athens.
- Traditionally, classicists explore topics that are contained within the sphere of ancient Greek or Roman societies.
- As a classicist, Tolkien was fascinated by the gaps in history.
- In literary interpretation, classicists warn us of the ‘documentary fallacy’, the impulse to treat fiction as if it recorded real events or characters from whom inferences can be drawn which have no basis in the text itself.
- Even writers who wanted to be thought of as classicists usually needed a Latin crib to help them through Greek poetry in this period.
- In recent years classicists and ancient historians have devoted renewed attention to the Archaic Age in Greece, the period from approximately the eighth century to the fifth century BC.
- His relatively cheap, compact editions of Greek and Latin authors, aimed at professional classicists and keen amateurs alike, rapidly became popular.
- Keats laced his finest poetry with mythological allusions, as did the great German classicist and translator of Sophocles, Hölderlin.
2A follower of classicism in the arts. 人文学科古典主义者 Example sentencesExamples - Ibsen would be a classicist, a romantic, a Scribean, a realist, a symbolist, not to mention a Hegelian and a feminist, before he would be an apocalyptic.
- The commission was clearly a turning point, representing a state of architectural flux; a decade later and he was a fully converted classicist in terms of both his funerary and domestic architecture.
- He thought of himself as ‘a classicist structurally, a romantic emotionally and a modernist harmonically’.
- He uses an architectural framework, as classicists do, to anchor the contents of the picture to the given horizontal and vertical of the support.
- Of course there were heroic modernist artists and writers who opposed twentieth-century totalitarianism, and classicists and traditionalists who supported totalitarianism.
- It is a classicist revenge drama that takes its time in becoming one, and is richer as a result.
- This seems entirely fitting for a composer who has often been content to embrace classicist formal integration and resist modernist formal fragmentation.
- He also wanted to juxtapose the accomplishments of different generations of artists and show that those who are considered classicists can sometimes think in more modern ways than their younger colleagues.
- At the core a classicist, albeit with modernist leanings, he has not abandoned tradition but given the Toronto-based company a fresh image - youthful, creative and adventurous.
- A homegrown classicist, he presented an idealized side of desire that the ancient Greeks would have understood.
- New classicists are aiming to restore the pleasure of the arts.
- How would you describe your life; would you call it a life of a concrete poet; of an artist; of a cultural classicist?
- In another era, he would have been a strict classicist; as a young man in the early years of the twentieth century, he found his characteristic imagery in the logic of industrial America - its machine dreams.
- When it comes to pop songwriting, she is a classicist.
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