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Meanings of literary fashion in English
We have no meanings for "literary fashion" in our records yet.
Usage of literary fashion in English
1
Since then it has become the literaryfashion to oppose this idea.
2
There has been no attempt to dress them up in literaryfashion.
3
They had the same tastes, the same gentle melancholy, the same freedom from the bondage of literaryfashion.
4
The classical Elizabeth introduced another literaryfashion; having translated the Hercules Oetacus, she made it fashionable to translate Greek tragedies.
5
It is significant to watch the dismal failure Gorky makes of it whenever, in concession to the modern literaryfashion, he attempts the mystical.
6
We agreed a few weeks later, although it was hardly the literaryfashion then to devote a book to a cricketer's confused and brooding thoughts.
7
And even Genius often follows the market-ittakes the prevailing literaryfashion, and adapts itself to the form in vogue in a more excellent way.
8
They served the double purpose of furnishing to the world faithful delineations of many more or less distinguished people and of setting a literaryfashion.
9
For some memoranda towards a history of literaryfashions, the following may be arranged:-
10
But it is curious to observe how the character of the complaints varies with the change in literaryfashions.
11
Instances are the craze for tulips, belief in sorcery, and the aberrations of literaryfashions.-Thereligion of Reason was such a craze.
12
An iconoclast, he was -and quite admirably so -one of those writers indifferent to literaryfashions and at odds with the trends.