A totally erroneous conception of what constituted classicalculture was thus brought about.
2
Assumptions which had their origin in feudal or even in classicalculture continued unquestioned.
3
Mr. Ware was a man of great learning of classicalculture, and elegant accomplishments.
4
With the breaking up of the Empire the stream of classicalculture was restricted to a narrow channel-theChurch.
5
Primary endpoint: detection of the inoculated pneumococci by classicalculture from nasal wash recovered from the participants after pneumococcal challenge.
Ús de classical art en anglès
1
The building is noted for its wealth of classicalart deco features.
2
Photographer Tom Hunter's remarkable work refers directly to classicalart.
3
Yet in classicalart the definite may still be rendered, the known, the conquered.
4
Rubens was renowned for his work that merges both classicalart and renaissance themes.
5
Kleist evidently studied the models of classicalart with care.
6
Sotatsu took classicalart and gave it new meaning.
7
All classicalart is a mistake and a superstition.
8
While much of the distinctively medieval culture remained, civilization was enriched by a revival of classicalart.
9
I didn't even have to show him my picture taken as Aphrodite in a classicalart study.
10
It was considered a turning point because it introduced Americans, accustomed to classicalart, to the European avant-garde.
11
So she paired their patronising comments with classicalart -and went viral It began with a tweet.
12
The poem is a magnificent example of classicalart, in the best Greek spirit, united with glowing romantic feeling.
13
Much of the supposedly classicalart that inspired fifteenth-century Florentines was bogus: the Baptistery was really a sixth- or seventh-century building.
14
What is Gothic touched him very little, but classicalart and the art of the Renaissance were always dear to him.
15
This productive dialogue between the classicalart music of India and of the Occident climaxes in a work commissioned by Deutsche Welle.
16
He is still, as he was at the outset of his reign, the patron of classicalart, classical drama, and classical music.