Get Free Checker

fantasia

[ US /fænˈteɪʒə/ ]
[ UK /fɑːntˈe‍ɪzi‍ə/ ]
NOUN
  1. a musical composition of a free form usually incorporating several familiar themes

How To Use fantasia In A Sentence

  • Uday's a handful, living out some Baathist-inflected fantasia on De Palma's Scarface, shooting off guns indoors, plucking schoolgirls off the streets and raping them, exercising Caligulan droit du seigneur over a war hero's new bride, prompting her suicide, and mutilating and disembowelling his own dad's food-taster at a banquet to honour Mrs Hosni Mubarak par-TAY! The Devil's Double and more movies on the megalomaniacal
  • Season three featured the so-called “Battle of the Divas,” resulting in a win for the gospelly Fantasia Barrino. Production Values
  • That silly Bud Bowl, with beer bottles coming to life like the brooms in Fantasia.
  • Later on, these same corporate infested predators got HHO generation lost in the world of cold fusion confusion with just enough funding to keep it limping along and waylayed in that fantastical way out there in a way out of the way never-never land world of a seeming, instead of a being; lost into a fantasia of never happenin '! A Bottom Up Rescue Plan for the Auto, Bank and Mortgage Companies
  • I saw the tour when it hit here and yes, Fantasia gospelizes quite a bit of her music.
  • I don't care to have another Fantasia (aka screamer) as an AI and that's all Adam is!! Undefined
  • Music specifically for viol consorts became increasingly sophisticated, with elaborate contrapuntal fantasias or ‘Fancies’.
  • To open the concert, William Neil gave a powerful account of J.S. Bach's "Fantasia" and Fugue in G Minor, BWV 542, on the church's magnificent Aeolian-Skinner organ. From City Choir of Washington, triumph out of tragedy
  • Bentley The workspace from the driver's seat is exemplary: A fantasia of knurled aluminum, polished brightwork, a door-to-door waistrail of walnut marquetry and piano-black fascia. Hand-Made Hyper-Luxury
  • Based on Virginia Woolf's glittering fantasia written as a love-letter to Vita Sackville-West, the story covers four hundred years of history.
View all