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dithyrambic

ADJECTIVE
  1. of or in the manner of a dithyramb

How To Use dithyrambic In A Sentence

  • Such is the case with Herrick's ‘Fare-well to Sack,’ a dithyrambic ode.
  • Heine’s mental history, but because they are a specimen of his power in that kind of dithyrambic writing which, in less masterly hands, easily becomes ridiculous: The Essays of "George Eliot" Complete
  • From time to time he'd been forced to wax dithyrambic even about the pretend engineers.
  • We are met almost at the threshold by a colossal epic, Creation, Man and the Messiah (1830); by songs that turn into dithyrambic odes, by descriptive pieces which embrace the universe, by all the froth and roar and turbidity of genius, with none of its purity and calm. Henrik Ibsen
  • He is quite right that Wilde is in the play as a foil to Housman, and elevates the "dithyrambic" artist at the expense of the scrupulous scholar. 'The Invention of Love': An Exchange
  • After the politicians, I went to the poets; tragic, dithyrambic, and all sorts. The Apology
  • Such an author will at one moment write in a dithyrambic vein, as though he were tipsy; at another, nay, on the very next page, he will be pompous, severe, profoundly learned and prolix, stumbling on in the most cumbrous way and chopping up everything very small; like the late Christian Wolf, only in a modern dress. The Art of Literature
  • Its structure was polyphonic and its language was dithyrambic. THE TATTOOED GIRL
  • Youth only can understand all that lies in the dithyrambic outpourings of youth when, after a stormy siege, of the most frantic folly and coolest common-sense, the heart finally yields to the assault of the latest comer, be it hope, or despair, as some mysterious power determines. The Deserted Woman
  • As already noted, Socrates classifies poetry (dithyrambic and tragic poetry are named) as a species of rhetoric. Plato on Rhetoric and Poetry
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