Мы используем Cookies Этот веб-сайт использует cookie-файлы, чтобы предлагать вам наиболее актуальную информацию. Просматривая этот веб-сайт, Вы принимаете cookie-файлы.
There was something in the action that suggested more than a mannerism.
2
His mannerism with them, it was patient, polite, genuine and very helpful.
3
The characteristics of rhetoric are insipidity, mannerism, and monotonous parallelism of clauses.
4
An ethical sympathy in an artist is an unpardonable mannerism of style.
5
His mannerism is great, but it is a noble and welcome mannerism.
Использование термина late renaissance на английском
1
As a student of sporting history, Roger Federer knows about the improbable laterenaissance of Muhammad Ali.
2
However, a miserable first-round 77 appears to have quashed any hopes of a treble despite Friday's laterenaissance.
3
A large number of the laterRenaissance school were Christians only in name.
4
Fountains are among the most successful monuments of the lateRenaissance.
5
The whole façade (17th century) represents rather lateRenaissance than transitional architecture.
6
Annibale Caro was one of the most distinguished writers of Italian prose and verse in the laterRenaissance.
7
Then during the lateRenaissance, painted portraits were let into these panels and became a part of the walls.
8
Minion is inspired by classical, oldstyle typefaces of the lateRenaissance, a period of elegant, beautiful, and highly readable type designs.
9
The type is that most admired by the lateRenaissance, and, in some measure, immortalized by Jean Goujon and the French.
10
Next to it stood a dozen pieces of statuary, mostly of the lateRenaissance, stacks of heavy gilt frames propped against them.
11
Persons fond of symbolism have found in the coincidence a forecast of the transit from the artistic to the scientific epoch of the laterRenaissance.
12
POLYPHONIA is a new professional vocal ensemble formed to perform music from the lateRenaissance and early baroque period under the conductorship of Blanaid Murphy.
13
The laterRenaissance, indeed, in what concerns imaginative literature, makes no such abrupt and sudden change of fashion as was made in the twelfth century.