adj
(architecture) In the style of Robert Adam (1728–1792), Scottish neoclassical architect.
n
(historical) In Ancient Greece, a ceremonial feast celebrated on the fifth or seventh day after the birth of a child.
n
A style of decorative art and architecture originating in the 1920s and 1930s, characterized by bold geometric forms and simple composition.
n
A series of French comic books written by René Goscinny and illustrated by Albert Uderzo about an Ancient Gaul named Asterix.
adj
(music, derogatory) Of or relating to a style of easy listening music that originated in the Baroque and pre-Classic periods, associated with the emergence of LP records and the ability to listen repeatedly to recordings without paying attention to structure etc.
adj
Complex and beautiful, despite an outward irregularity.
n
(music) The musical period of time following the Renaissance, extending roughly between 1600-1750.
adj
(informal) Suggesting a baroque style.
adj
Relating to, or reminiscent of, the legends about Paul Bunyan, a giant lumberjack in American folklore
adj
in the style of a caricature
adj
(architecture) Relating to a Spanish baroque architectural style that started in the late 17th century to the early 18th century; characterized by flamboyant ornamentation
n
The style of art and architecture associated with 16th-century Italy.
n
The style of art or architecture of that period.
n
A classical scholar, especially one who studies ancient Greek and Latin language and culture.
n
(literature) A literary style during the Baroque period of Spain, characterized by a very ornamental, ostentatious vocabulary and a message that is complicated by a sea of metaphors and complex syntactical order.
n
The orgiastic Ancient Greek festivals seasonally held in honor of Dionysus, which evolved into Greek comedy and tragedy.
n
(architecture) A style of architecture found in regions such as the Philippines and Guatemala, where large public buildings were rebuilt in the baroque style after destructive earthquakes.
n
The literary and artistic styles of the Edwardian era.
n
A Greek ode in honor of a victorious athlete
adj
(art) modernist; of the artistic style of the period from around 1890 to 1960
n
(informal) A painting by Thomas Gainsborough.
n
(music) Principally during the transition from the Baroque to the Classical period, a few decades either side of 1750, the use of more classically simplistic traits in comparison to the highly embellished and texturally complex precedent in the Baroque period.
n
Alternative form of Gudermannian [(mathematics) A particular function, gd(x)=2 tan ⁻¹eˣ-𝜋/2.]
v
To speak, write or behave in a Hemingwayesque manner.
adj
Reminiscent of the Biblical prophet Jonah, who was cast into the sea and swallowed by a great fish.
n
Korean studies, the study of Korea.
adj
(architecture) Reminiscent of Lombard architecture.
adj
(informal) Somewhat medieval in style.
adj
Of or relating to the literary works of John Milton.
n
Alternative spelling of missionary-linguist [A missionary who seeks to study a people's language in order to facilitate religious conversion.]
n
A period in western architecture and music in the late 19th century, characterized by the Baroque style but occurring after the Baroque period.
adj
(art) Describing a style of French painters and architects of the mid-19th century.
adj
In architecture, representing a return to traditional materials as a reaction against modernism.
adj
Of pertaining to a style of architecture based on classical models, especially such a style of the 18th century.
adj
Stylistically reminiscent of a novel.
n
Alternative letter-case form of Oghamist [Someone who specialises in the academic study of Ogham inscriptions.]
adj
Reminiscent of the forthright and abrasive interviewing style of Jeremy Paxman (born 1950), English broadcaster and journalist.
n
Francesco Petrarca (1304–1374), Italian scholar and poet.
n
(culture) Scholarship and culture, particularly classical, literary and linguistic.
adj
Reminiscent of Hercule Poirot, a fictional Belgian detective in the works of Agatha Christie, known for his finicky neatness and for assembling suspects at the conclusion of a case to explain what happened and who committed the crime.
n
A writer of French prose.
adj
Densely convoluted, verbose and full of allusion
n
The art style of the quattrocentists.
adj
Of, or relating to the style of art or architecture of the Renaissance.
n
The rococo system of scroll ornament, based in part on the forms of shells and water-worn rocks.
n
(uncountable) A style of baroque architecture and decorative art, from 18th-century France, having elaborate ornamentation.
adj
Somewhat rococo in style.
n
(countable) A playwright of the standing of William Shakespeare
n
A person trained to act in Shakespeare's plays.
n
A Sherlock Holmes scholar or fan; one who studies and/or appreciates the works of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle.
n
Memorabilia or writings related to the fictional detective Sherlock Holmes.
adj
Reminiscent of the Star Wars franchise.
adj
Reminiscent of a storybook.
n
A Tolkienite or Tolkienologist.
n
The fourteenth century AD; particularly, the style of Italian art associated with the 1300s
adj
Reminiscent of Star Trek.
n
(architecture) A style of Baroque revival architecture popular in England from the turn of the 20th century.
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