English to Arabic Dictionary romanticism

romanticism

رومانتيكية
definition
noun
In common with other early nineteenth century literature, Emily Brontë's novel contains elements of romanticism , gothic, and fantasy.
a movement in the arts and literature that originated in the late 18th century, emphasizing inspiration, subjectivity, and the primacy of the individual.
a quality of romanticism about women that leads to the creation of a pipe-dream fantasy
the state or quality of being romantic.
translation of 'romanticism'
noun
خيالية,
وهمي,
رومانتيكية
example
In common with other early nineteenth century literature, Emily Brontë's novel contains elements of 'romanticism' , gothic, and fantasy.
a quality of 'romanticism' about women that leads to the creation of a pipe-dream fantasy
Throughout his life he read voraciously about the great figures of European 'romanticism' and symbolism.
This involved a step from classicism towards 'romanticism' - which was also a shift from civilisation towards barbarism.
The strange thing about his enthusiasm was that it was for one of the great works of 20th century 'romanticism' and by the greatest romantic writer of the century.
Her argument about 'romanticism' - which is one of the primary thrusts of the book - is based on the period's celebration of inwardness and the notion of an essential authorial subject.
It is this embattled 'romanticism' that surfaces in Orwell's text in the form of paranoia.
Literary 'romanticism' and cultural nationalism informed the historical consciousness of regional raconteurs like Hall who looked for American themes within the history of the West.
British 'romanticism' transformed the landscape aesthetic towards seeing mountains as sublime and picturesque.
He also had a certain 'romanticism' and thrill about him which made me feel breathless and like I was ten feet above the ground, floating in the air.
Marx detested 'romanticism' , emotionalism, sentimentalism and humanitarianism of any kind.
I'm fascinated by the period of early 'romanticism' , when the composers of the time continued to inhabit some classical conventions but work outwards from within those.
Maggie saw it, too, and with all the 'romanticism' in a young woman's heart, she welcomed it.
‘There was a 'romanticism' about it and a mystery,’ he says.
It's got a certain 'romanticism' , the radio does.
He exaggerates both 'romanticism' 's sense of the expansive subject and modernism's sense of the subject suspended within a complex web of signs.
However, Symphony #1 holds up quite well to the Haydn and Mozart models, and the 2nd Symphony is close to being a masterpiece of early 'romanticism' .
Though natural history does not privilege the individual moment of perception in quite the way that 'romanticism' does, it does rely on a process of imaginative synthesis.
As the natural art of commemoration, sculpture took heart from 'romanticism' , which fostered the remembrance of piety, power, talent, loyalty, or valour.
The nineteenth century brought 'romanticism' and realism.
Balanced between neoclassicism and 'romanticism' , the composition appears at once rigidly stable yet inherently fluid.
Was it this, the sense of art as supreme sacrifice, which appealed so strongly to Western 'romanticism' and the avant-garde?
It was a pathetic love story of the 'romanticist' poetess Elizabeth Barrett and novice poet Robert Browning.
After a brief stint as a literary critic in the columns of L' Indicatore Genovese on the side of the 'romanticists' against classicists, he found his way into the secret society of the carbonari to conspire and agitate for government reform.
Like the leading surrealists he undertook a serious study of psychoanalysis and cultivated a friendship with the German 'romanticist' writer Hermann Hesse for whose books he provided illustrations.
Credits: Google Translate
Download the
HelloEnglishApp
image_one