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dramatic composition

NOUN
  1. a play for performance on the stage or television or in a movie etc.

How To Use dramatic composition In A Sentence

  • The bold foreshortening and the swirling draperies create an intensely dramatic composition.
  • His dramatic compositions of bridge pilings, freeway foundations and steel frameworks are as calmly sculpturesque as a Greek Kouri yet still create a sense of unease.
  • Players are the worst readers of all: — reads vilely; and Mrs. —, who is so celebrated, can read nothing well but dramatic compositions: Milton she cannot read sufferably. Confessions of an English Opium-Eater
  • In dramatic composition, the equivalent of the Short-story is the one-act play, be it drama or comedy or comedietta or farce. Lippincott's Magazine, October 1885
  • His stark, dramatic compositions strive for immediacy of effect at all costs - now in unpolished newsreel fashion, now in shadowy borrowings from Expressionism.
  • We remember with a thrill of pride that England produced Shakespeare, but we must also remember that this great Dominion of ours, flung from sea to sea, with a national life as bounding in vigour as it is defective in character, with the stamp of bigness on both its accomplishment and its promise, is without a stage of its own, is without a school of dramatists, is without one dramatic composition in, any way expressive of its wider issues. The Interpreters of Canada
  • Players are the worst readers of all: -- reads vilely; and Mrs. ---, who is so celebrated, can read nothing well but dramatic compositions: Milton she cannot read sufferably. Confessions of an English Opium-Eater
  • It is to be observed, none the less, that he is a great lyric poet, and that his lyrism saturates his dramatic compositions from first to last. The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 3: Brownson-Clairvaux
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