English to Punjabi Dictionary allegorical

allegorical

ਪ੍ਰਤੀਕਾਤਮਿਕ
definition
adjective
an allegorical painting
constituting or containing allegory.
example
Such a view of the world was inclined toward mystical and 'allegorical' meaning of reality and truth.
Strikingly, most children read Narnia as a simple fantasy story and do not recognise the Christian 'allegorical' nature of the plot.
It is also fitting that she chose such an 'allegorical' , almost mystical way to present such a brutal act.
The elements are represented by four 'allegorical' pictures and in the centre of the pavement the mask of Medusa is portrayed.
He himself denied any 'allegorical' significance in his work.
They never acquire the independent meaning of a neat 'allegorical' subtext.
Nowhere do we see a case for Rowling being as 'allegorical' as C.S. Lewis or as skilled with metaphor as Roald Dahl.
Vietnamese songs are very metaphoric and very 'allegorical' and very soft.
In a society dominated by 'allegorical' and historical painting, his scenes of contemporary life were regarded as a novelty.
Jahangir commissioned some of the most powerful 'allegorical' paintings to emerge from the Mughal School.
I just can't join the bandwagon of rabble rousers determined to endow basic biological functions with 'allegorical' status.
Their paintings have no hidden sides to them, no 'allegorical' finesse.
The narrative voice, too, is made vivid: never before in English has the poem sounded less 'allegorical' and more humane.
A jaunty cow recounts an 'allegorical' tale of bad blood in the herd.
I'm always a little nervous about 'allegorical' poems, especially when the subject of the allegory is a long time ago in a land far, far away.
Melville specifically denies at the beginning of his story that it is 'allegorical' - which it patently is.
His narratives, in which he translates current events, are too 'allegorical' to be history, yet too mutable to be myth.
His most characteristic works were figures or groups of a historical, literary, 'allegorical' , or symbolic nature.
In fantasy writing the 'allegorical' quality is simply more obvious.
The film is rich in 'allegorical' theme and symbolic imagery, transforming the most banal of materials into miraculous epiphanies.
The physical disruptions to space in Farrell's photographs work 'allegorically' to describe the ruptures of memory and landscape.
Do you mean for viewers to interpret the film 'allegorically' ?
The second mitigating factor is that Crowley uses the entirety of time travel 'allegorically' , as a metaphor for British colonialism.
There are exquisite touches, executed with extraordinary skill: the 'allegorically' suggestive tear in the curtain; the artist's helpless dishabille; the uniquely knowing expression on the face of the central woman.
In his later films Pasolini preoccupied himself with the poetic, 'allegoric' , and mystic in search of a purity of experience that he believed civilisation and modernity had despoiled.
It's been described as an 'allegoric' journey of the evolution of human consciousness.
Whilst he writes of his anxiety for the future, he also takes the stoic attitude I remember so well in him when he writes, in part (in somewhat 'allegoric' French): ‘There you have it, the life of a new immigrant.’
The long robe of the 'allegoric' figure as well as her appearance over water would be familiar to the majority of the nominally Catholic French nation as an allusion to the Virgin Mary.
All scripture and religious doctrine that conflict with reason must be interpreted 'allegorically' , so as to express moral insights.
The 'allegoric' dimension is irresistible - as darkness descends on film's old magic of chemistry and optics, its offspring, video, is coming into the light.
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