释义 |
Definition of poetically in English: poeticallyadverb pəʊˈɛtɪk(ə)lipoʊˈɛdɪkli 1By means of or in relation to poetry. he strove to express poetically the voice of the new country a poetically talented artist Example sentencesExamples - This American style profoundly affected Spain, and without it, Spanish America would have remained heavily dependent, poetically, on Europe.
- It will be found that grand style arises in poetry when a noble nature, poetically gifted, treats with simplicity or severity a serious subject.
- If you're not sure the poem has worked this way, it hasn't worked poetically.
- The aim of the compiler has been to bring together verses which will continue to give abiding delight to the poetically minded reader.
- What would make the readers sense, imagine, experience the reality you have poetically conjured to finally bring home the theme or message?
- You cannot just start writing down truisms, lest you end up writing prose, so how do you start poetically?
- The manners of the epic poem ought to be poetically good, but it is not necessary they be always morally so.
- Our concern is the more radical impingement of what those people had and have to say poetically, of their different poetic languages, on that of Latin America.
- I was born a poet, I am a poet, and I will die a poet—I live and I love poetically, and if I cannot write, I die.
- This is a collection of me poetically for you to view so that you can know and understand a little more of my poetic history.
- 1.1 With an imaginative or sensitively emotional style of expression.
a poetically phrased tribute Example sentencesExamples - What could have been a simple plein-air painting of the sky morphs into a cerebral yet poetically lively hybrid.
- We come to see just how much history is poetically embedded in his tall tales.
- A commonplace material designed to bring order to a garden was poetically transformed to explore the activity of ordering in a gallery.
- The film's release in 1964 poetically brought his life full circle.
- Holding her face, he reflects poetically that he has finally found the woman he has been waiting for.
- It is not just showing off, or talking poetically, or doing good things to get good things for yourself in return.
- Despite the narrator's poetically expressed assertion that "history tightropes toward family," history barely puts in an appearance here.
- She recounts the story of the boy, very poetically illustrating her close friendship with his mother.
- The sudden discontinuity was often poetically associated with the attaining of enlightenment.
- Here may be a key to understanding the liberties he takes with the painters whose lives he poetically reinvents.
Definition of poetically in US English: poeticallyadverbpōˈediklēpoʊˈɛdɪkli 1By means of or in relation to poetry. he strove to express poetically the voice of the new country a poetically talented artist Example sentencesExamples - This is a collection of me poetically for you to view so that you can know and understand a little more of my poetic history.
- The manners of the epic poem ought to be poetically good, but it is not necessary they be always morally so.
- This American style profoundly affected Spain, and without it, Spanish America would have remained heavily dependent, poetically, on Europe.
- I was born a poet, I am a poet, and I will die a poet—I live and I love poetically, and if I cannot write, I die.
- Our concern is the more radical impingement of what those people had and have to say poetically, of their different poetic languages, on that of Latin America.
- You cannot just start writing down truisms, lest you end up writing prose, so how do you start poetically?
- The aim of the compiler has been to bring together verses which will continue to give abiding delight to the poetically minded reader.
- What would make the readers sense, imagine, experience the reality you have poetically conjured to finally bring home the theme or message?
- If you're not sure the poem has worked this way, it hasn't worked poetically.
- It will be found that grand style arises in poetry when a noble nature, poetically gifted, treats with simplicity or severity a serious subject.
- 1.1 With an imaginative or sensitively emotional style of expression.
a poetically phrased tribute Example sentencesExamples - Here may be a key to understanding the liberties he takes with the painters whose lives he poetically reinvents.
- What could have been a simple plein-air painting of the sky morphs into a cerebral yet poetically lively hybrid.
- We come to see just how much history is poetically embedded in his tall tales.
- The film's release in 1964 poetically brought his life full circle.
- It is not just showing off, or talking poetically, or doing good things to get good things for yourself in return.
- Holding her face, he reflects poetically that he has finally found the woman he has been waiting for.
- The sudden discontinuity was often poetically associated with the attaining of enlightenment.
- Despite the narrator's poetically expressed assertion that "history tightropes toward family," history barely puts in an appearance here.
- A commonplace material designed to bring order to a garden was poetically transformed to explore the activity of ordering in a gallery.
- She recounts the story of the boy, very poetically illustrating her close friendship with his mother.
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