Kolbert: Journalists are not known for their romantic view of American politics.
2
Byron indulged in vice in a romantic way; Hook in the coarsest.
3
He'd stayed free of romantic entanglements since leaving Paris five years ago.
4
War today, Kane, isn't won by romantic animals dashing at forlorn hopes.
5
I'm not romantic by nature, and you've made your position perfectly clear.
1
Fifteen years after the starting of romanticism the movement had materially subsided.
2
Realism has taught romanticism to tell the truth, if it would succeed.
3
Brutal realism is offset by romanticism, idealism, even a flawed human grandeur.
4
Spasiuk's music has a grace and a romanticism that make it irresistible.
5
Gogol's romanticism, shut in within himself, finding no outlet, became a flame.
1
It provided one gasp-inducing exchange after another, tennis to rouse the romantics.
2
Stendhal, himself a romantic, as these men are romantics, could do it.
3
My parents were romantics: dad says they considered both 'Golden' and 'Silver'!
4
But I am not narrowly on the side of the romantics.
5
I'm strictly prog rock and the nineteenth-century romantics, said Dr Walid.
1
The old-style lamp posts pay homage to a classic, more romanticera.
2
The third was truly the romanticera of the Crusades.
3
Graceful and elegant, like something from a distant, romanticera.
4
Archer's garage on Fenian Street, built in the late 1940s during the romanticera of motoring in Ireland, was demolished over the bank holiday weekend.
5
Beethoven revolutionized orchestral music, leading it out of the Classical and into the Romanticera.
Ús de romantic period en anglès
1
With the romanticperiod of Spanish history Irving was in ardent sympathy.
2
It reminded me of Goethe, of the romanticperiod:
3
Within the romanticperiod the same phenomenon is evident.
4
Wherein the Captain's little girl reaches the romanticperiod of her career, and faces the world.
5
The story was of brigands and true lovers, the thing that was popular in the romanticperiod.
6
The romanticperiod had succeeded the classic.
7
It's really a very good piece of work, Williams; it has quite a feeling of the romanticperiod.
8
No wonder that men look back upon their college life as upon halcyon days, the romanticperiod of youth.
9
In such regions, at that romanticperiod of night, the aeronaut, as might have been expected, saw strange unearthly sights.
10
The doomed but brave sally sparked the English imagination in a romanticperiod when the doomed but brave was much celebrated.
11
With its gorgeous minimalist decor, romanticperiod windows facing over Dublin rooftops, and burgundy velvetcurtained entry, it seems more like Paris.
12
The polished rimed couplet, also, pleasing as its precision and smoothness are for a while, becomes eventually monotonous to most readers of a romanticperiod.
13
De Sanctis has been speaking of the Romanticperiod in Italy, when he says:
14
At the end of the tenth century began the Romanticperiod, which closed in the thirteenth.
15
How does the lyric quality of 'Alexander's Feast' compare with that of the best lyrics of more Romanticperiods?
16
How were these ruddy-cheeked, full-bodied, hospitable personages who sat about you to be held compatible with the romanticperiods and characters that they described?