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Definition of Byronic in English: Byronicadjective bʌɪˈrɒnɪkbaɪˈrɑnɪk 1Characteristic of Lord Byron or his poetry. 具拜伦勋爵特点的;有拜伦诗歌特点的 Example sentencesExamples - His singing talent aside (if one can put so considerable a contribution to the side, even momentarily), he brings together energy, ferocity, sexuality, swagger, and sensitivity in a powerful Byronic persona.
- Too bad the Byronic hero, or was he a villain, was watching her every move.
- While his public image then was of some long-coated dandy, flicking away female attention with his Byronic hair, it was a guise that ill-fitted him.
- Lord Byron, who only saw his daughter as a baby, was well aware of his estranged wife's desire to banish any Byronic blemish in Ada.
- ‘He really was the last of these Byronic figures we don't see any more: warrior poets, great seducers,’ he says.
- We had this wonderful Byronic poet and, as with so many family stories, it was about love and money, and the loss of that money.
- As critics have noted recently, Byron's late writings enact a critique of the popular Byronic hero.
- Sorry, I haven't written any Byronic epigrams lately.
- With his high public profile, Byronic good looks and houses on both sides of the Atlantic, it's little wonder that he attracts resentment from his fellow scholars.
- In the nineteenth century for instance, it was a very Byronic role, very demonic and tormented and isolated, tortured romantic figure.
- It seems like an appropriately Byronic note on which to end my holiday.
- I've written an article on Byronic heroes in popular culture (a miniature version of an as yet unpublished book on the topic), and this is one of the heroes discussed.
- She's drawn to the gorgeous Liverpuddlian whose Byronic aspects spell trouble for everyone involved.
- He's older than his voice sounds - the Byronic silver hair swept backwards indicates that he could be in his sixties.
- The person, who looked most likely to be a man, stayed just out of the range of my knife and smiled at me, looking like a cross between a Byronic vampire and Jack the Ripper.
- Even the most erudite indie lyricists are hardly Byronic in their abilities.
- I could try to fool people by letting it grow a bit, but as my father told me when I was a teenager, there's a fine line between Byronic and Moronic.
- More than 100 works feature including paintings, photographs, letters, literary manuscripts, memorabilia and examples of Byronic dress.
- Polish Romanticism is infused with messianism, nationalistic yearning, Byronic rebellion.
- Knowing more about his past helps reinforce the idea of him as a Byronic Hero.
- 1.1 (of a man) alluringly dark, mysterious, and moody.
(男人)拜伦似的(指有着深沉的忧郁、神秘和喜怒无常) Example sentencesExamples - I was trying to point out the reality of a Byronic man is far from romantic.
- The start-up society is, surely, the world of the individual - not the lone, Byronic individual beloved of ‘tough-guy capitalism’, but the socialised and sociable individual, working in a team and purchasing thoughtfully.
- The glam cabaret material predominates, but when the spotlight goes down on the musician, the protean star, to reveal a romantic balladeer with a powerful voice and Byronic demeanour, you begin to sense the artist's real potential.
- That said, those who find a suggestive relationship between a 12-year-old boy and a Byronic man too unsettling are advised to read something else.
- There was the Byronic man, sensitive and heroic - especially popular amongst young men of the 1830s and 1840s, and modelled after Lord Byron with his leonine head, fair skin, and a body which was regularly subjected to dieting.
- He is just too Byronic and haunted in his gaze: taciturn yes, but a bit like Christ in the attic.
- Tall, broad-shouldered, and in his mid-thirties, he was the personification of Yuppie men in cologne commercials: sleek, well-dressed, Byronic, and very much aware of it.
- Possessing a romantic streak, he saw himself a Byronic man, an individualist and poet with deep sympathy for the oppressed.
- Quinn simply did not like the elfinly angelic man dressed in a cross between a Byronic poet and a punk rocker sitting across from him.
Rhymesanachronic, animatronic, bionic, Brythonic, bubonic, canonic, carbonic, catatonic, chalcedonic, chronic, colonic, conic, cyclonic, daemonic, demonic, diatonic, draconic, electronic, embryonic, euphonic, harmonic, hegemonic, histrionic, homophonic, hypersonic, iconic, ionic, ironic, isotonic, laconic, macaronic, Masonic, Miltonic, mnemonic, monotonic, moronic, Napoleonic, philharmonic, phonic, Platonic, Plutonic, polyphonic, quadraphonic, sardonic, saxophonic, siphonic, Slavonic, sonic, stereophonic, subsonic, subtonic, symphonic, tectonic, Teutonic, thermionic, tonic, transonic, ultrasonic Definition of Byronic in US English: Byronicadjectivebīˈränikbaɪˈrɑnɪk 1Characteristic of Lord Byron or his poetry. 具拜伦勋爵特点的;有拜伦诗歌特点的 Example sentencesExamples - We had this wonderful Byronic poet and, as with so many family stories, it was about love and money, and the loss of that money.
- Too bad the Byronic hero, or was he a villain, was watching her every move.
- The person, who looked most likely to be a man, stayed just out of the range of my knife and smiled at me, looking like a cross between a Byronic vampire and Jack the Ripper.
- He's older than his voice sounds - the Byronic silver hair swept backwards indicates that he could be in his sixties.
- Lord Byron, who only saw his daughter as a baby, was well aware of his estranged wife's desire to banish any Byronic blemish in Ada.
- With his high public profile, Byronic good looks and houses on both sides of the Atlantic, it's little wonder that he attracts resentment from his fellow scholars.
- I could try to fool people by letting it grow a bit, but as my father told me when I was a teenager, there's a fine line between Byronic and Moronic.
- More than 100 works feature including paintings, photographs, letters, literary manuscripts, memorabilia and examples of Byronic dress.
- Sorry, I haven't written any Byronic epigrams lately.
- It seems like an appropriately Byronic note on which to end my holiday.
- Even the most erudite indie lyricists are hardly Byronic in their abilities.
- As critics have noted recently, Byron's late writings enact a critique of the popular Byronic hero.
- In the nineteenth century for instance, it was a very Byronic role, very demonic and tormented and isolated, tortured romantic figure.
- ‘He really was the last of these Byronic figures we don't see any more: warrior poets, great seducers,’ he says.
- While his public image then was of some long-coated dandy, flicking away female attention with his Byronic hair, it was a guise that ill-fitted him.
- She's drawn to the gorgeous Liverpuddlian whose Byronic aspects spell trouble for everyone involved.
- Knowing more about his past helps reinforce the idea of him as a Byronic Hero.
- I've written an article on Byronic heroes in popular culture (a miniature version of an as yet unpublished book on the topic), and this is one of the heroes discussed.
- His singing talent aside (if one can put so considerable a contribution to the side, even momentarily), he brings together energy, ferocity, sexuality, swagger, and sensitivity in a powerful Byronic persona.
- Polish Romanticism is infused with messianism, nationalistic yearning, Byronic rebellion.
- 1.1 (of a man) alluringly dark, mysterious, and moody.
(男人)拜伦似的(指有着深沉的忧郁、神秘和喜怒无常) Example sentencesExamples - The start-up society is, surely, the world of the individual - not the lone, Byronic individual beloved of ‘tough-guy capitalism’, but the socialised and sociable individual, working in a team and purchasing thoughtfully.
- The glam cabaret material predominates, but when the spotlight goes down on the musician, the protean star, to reveal a romantic balladeer with a powerful voice and Byronic demeanour, you begin to sense the artist's real potential.
- There was the Byronic man, sensitive and heroic - especially popular amongst young men of the 1830s and 1840s, and modelled after Lord Byron with his leonine head, fair skin, and a body which was regularly subjected to dieting.
- Possessing a romantic streak, he saw himself a Byronic man, an individualist and poet with deep sympathy for the oppressed.
- Tall, broad-shouldered, and in his mid-thirties, he was the personification of Yuppie men in cologne commercials: sleek, well-dressed, Byronic, and very much aware of it.
- He is just too Byronic and haunted in his gaze: taciturn yes, but a bit like Christ in the attic.
- That said, those who find a suggestive relationship between a 12-year-old boy and a Byronic man too unsettling are advised to read something else.
- I was trying to point out the reality of a Byronic man is far from romantic.
- Quinn simply did not like the elfinly angelic man dressed in a cross between a Byronic poet and a punk rocker sitting across from him.
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