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单词 Literary
例句
(1) By the 1920's, he was lionised by literary London.
(2) Her poetry is full of obscure literary allusions.
(3) It is a literary word.
(4) Latin was the literary language of.
(5) He reads all the literary quarterlies.
(6) He presents his own highbrow literary programme.
(7) Her internationally acclaimed novel has won several literary prizes.
(8) He made little proficiency in literary accomplishments.
(9) He began to churn out literary compositions in English.
(10) Literary studies have been cross - fertilized by new ideas in linguistics.
(11) She's the literary editor of the "Sunday Review".
(12) He used to attend to his literary salons.
(13) Her novels are packed with literary allusions.
(14) Your style is a bit too literary.
(15) Her poetry is full of obscure literary allusion.
(16) Her speech was larded with literary quotations.
(17) He was inducted into a literary society.
(18) He made a living from literary work.
(19) The book drew lavish praise from literary critics.
(20) They met at a literary luncheon.
(21) The annotation of literary texts makes them more accessible.
(22) My father often contributes to a literary journal.
(23) He was esteemed as a literary wit.
(24) James Joyce's Ulysses'challenged the literary traditions of his day.
(25) The Journals contain accounts of literary composition.
(26) The book was favourably noticed in literary magazines.
(27) Her first novel won a prestigious literary prize.
(28) He showed a literary bent from a young age.
(29) He is highly disdainful of anything to do with the literary establishment.
(30) She has been described as the creative colossus of the literary world.
(1) By the 1920's, he was lionised by literary London.
(2) Latin was the literary language of.
(3) He presents his own highbrow literary programme.
(4) Her internationally acclaimed novel has won several literary prizes.
(5) He made little proficiency in literary accomplishments.
(6) He began to churn out literary compositions in English.
(7) He is highly disdainful of anything to do with the literary establishment.
(8) She has been described as the creative colossus of the literary world.
(9) The book was favourably noticed in literary magazines.
(10) Her first novel won a prestigious literary prize.
(11) Camus is considered to be one of the twentieth century's literary giants.
(31) He often undervalued the literary works of young writers.
(32) Her book gained several literary prizes.
(33) His literary style is still rather raw.
(34) She has contributed to literary magazines.
(35) Metaphor is a common literary device.
(36) His reputation has tarnished in literary circles.
(37) The conservatism of the literary establishment in this country is as-tounding.
(38) A major new talent has burst on the literary scene.
(39) She has made quite a splash in literary circles with her first book.
(40) She has published more than 20 books including novels(), poetry and literary criticism.
(41) I think your letter is under that book. Underneath can also be used when you want to emphasize that something is being covered or hidden by another thing:Have you looked underneath the sofa as well as behind it? You can also use beneath in this sense, but it is a very formal or literary word.
(42) Many literary academics simply parrot a set of impressive-sounding phrases.
(43) The excisions have destroyed the literary value of the text.
(44) The prize money for literary competitions can be as high as £40 000.
(45) Joyce's style of writing was a striking departure from the literary norm .
(46) Palace has released two marvellous films that pay homage to our literary heritage.
(47) He's busy touting his client's latest book around London's literary agents.
(48) He set out to conquer the literary world of London.
(49) Literary scholars are piecing together her last unpublished novel from fragments of a recently discovered manuscript.
(50) Dublin is thought of first and foremost for its literary heritage.
(51) "It's of no great literary merit," he said,[] almost apologetically.
(52) He had to read a canon of accepted literary texts.
(53) There is a rich vein of literary talent here just waiting to be tapped by publishers.
(54) And she, too, suffers from a lack of critical engagement with the literary texts.
(55) He was never part of the literary mainstream as a writer.
(56) It was Chaucer who really turned English into a literary language.
(57) Everyone thinks he has it in him to produce a literary classic.
(58) He was not vain, but he was quietly proud of his literary achievements.
(59) Camus is considered to be one of the twentieth century's literary giants.
(60) by lawful/legal means. Lawful tends to be used in technical or literary contexts. The same is true of the opposites, unlawful and illegal, but illegal is used especially about criminal activities. Legal also means 'connected with the law':the US legal system.
(61) The pace of the book is leisurely, with enjoyable literary and historical asides.
(62) A major new talent has burst onto the literary scene.
(63) Either an author or a man interested in literature is named a literary man.
(64) Literary texts , like all other works of art, have a historical context.
(65) It was clear to him that Tolkien was a literary genius.
(66) The world which the book inhabits seems too self-consciously literary, too introverted.
(67) Genet started as a rebel, but soon became part of the literary mainstream.
(68) The numerous excisions have destroyed the literary value of the text.
(69) A literary critic should not be too subjective in his approach.
(70) He was a man of many parts: writer, literary critic and historian.
(71) They're fond of holding what are laughingly known as literary soirees.
(72) The Booker Prize is the most coveted British literary award.
(73) In certain circles he has been dismissed as a literary lightweight.
(74) Pope and he kept up a running literary battle.
(75) Literary Arabic has always been the cement of Islam.
(76) Can schools remove literary classics from the curriculum?
(76) is a sentence dictionary, on which you can find excellent sentences for a large number of words.
(77) He had started a literary bookshop in the 1930s.
(78) A little literary allusion, for another.
(79) After all, the Literary Digest Poll for the 1932 election came within a tiny margin of the actual result.
(80) These volumes contain poetry which may be categorized generally as a poetry of attitudes, the attitudes being both literary and vital.
(81) Our literary canons have largely been constructed on such Renaissance suppositions.
(82) He took an avid interest in the school play, the debating society, the Grotonian literary magazine.
(83) Three years later the United Nations hired me as a literary adviser.
(84) This dilemma has been present since the beginnings of institutionalized literary study.
(85) By 1920 she had written two novels, and had succeeded in winning recognition in literary circles.
(86) Nevertheless, few literary movements have exhibited such an abiding preoccupation with establishing antecedents in order to defend and define their textual practices.
(87) He felt the attraction of the literary life of the metropolis.
(88) Far From the Madding Crowd brought this period of literary apprenticeship to a triumphant close.
(89) What had rendered her and Tristram's literary fraud trivial by comparison?
(90) It was only later that the aesthetic dimension of literary study became emphasized, with an accompanying concentration on the fictional genres.
(91) As an example, Graff raises the relation of a feminist literary canon to more familiar ones.
(92) It is not just a question of new ground being broken in the academic journals and literary magazines.
(93) Her exact literary status continues to be debated in academia.
(94) Trade-union development did, however, impart a literary dimension for all its continued employment of ritual and symbolism.
(95) More literary games, but here intellectual conceits are mixed with bawdy farce.
(96) This connection between history and memory is what makes this such an important literary accomplishment.
(97) These speeches had to be rich in literary illusion and ruminative aphorism.
(98) Perhaps the only firm conclusion to emerge from this continuing debate is the recognition that the literary scene has become pluralistic.
(99) Bill Raeper was well known in literary circles in Oxford.
(100) Whitley, a willowy former City banker, peppered his talk with literary bon mots and some distinctly fast verse.
(101) The latest bestsellers in contemporary fiction and literary classics for every collection.
(102) We considered media education largely as part of the exploration of contemporary culture, alongside more traditional literary texts.
(103) Echoes of political controversy are scattered over the literary productivity of the age.
(104) Charles Olson relied on his wide circle of literary friends when he recruited for Black Mountain.
(105) They say I had the vanity to suppose that he and I might one day share the authorship of some literary work.
(106) Rights were acquired in literary properties that would never be filmed.
(106) is a sentence dictionary, on which you can find nice sentences for a large number of words.
(107) These three prototypes of the modern gothic are now considered literary classics.
(108) In taking isolates from the literature, faceted classification rests firmly on literary warrant.
(109) Is it relevant to our literary tradition, our aesthetic sense, our social and psychological concerns?
(110) The John Hewitt library and the Francis Stuart archive of literary manuscripts are recent additions.
(111) Children have choices in literary activities; they collaborate in pairs, in small groups, and with their teachers.
(112) Maligned by their critics and adored by their readers, romances have definitely had an effect upon the literary world.
(113) The club is popular with media celebrities and literary types.
(114) I often pray, though I’m not really sure Anyone’s listening; and I phrase it carefully, just in case He’s literary. Mignon McLaughlin 
(115) There is a colloquial standard to learn on the playground and a literary standard to learn in class.
(116) Melville has combined these basic elements together very conveniently with the literary device of Ishmael, the narrator.
(117) He is said to have a good classical education, and is a Gentleman of considerable literary talents.
(118) Constantine has built his literary career by writing about crime in the decaying western Pennsylvania steel town of Rocksburg.
(119) Risking everything, Saskia auditions for the position of best friend with a dazzling burst of literary fantasies.
(120) All the other literary women he knew were old bags of whom he would be bitterly ashamed.
(121) Eleanor's husband had secured his first lectureship, and her first novel had been acclaimed in literary circles.
(122) But even for those who move freely in this circle of literary classics, Characters still has some problems.
(123) After college, they moved on to literary and academic careers and began a rightward march through the 1940s and 1950s.
(124) He was an active member of the Literary and Philosophical Society of Liverpool from 1837 onwards and served as its treasurer.
(125) It was because of the possibility of literary devices losing their defamiliarizing capacity that the distinction between device and function was introduced.
(126) There are two eighteenth centuries vivid to the modern literary consciousness.
(127) It makes it less audacious and less entertaining than the Eye, of course, except for the literary and dramatic reviews.
(128) I would often rather read it than more conventional forms of literary scholarship.
(129) Among those literary wanderers of the day who sought a wide and appreciative audience, exaggeration was the fashion.
(130) His most significant literary achievement was his involvement with two important periodicals.
(131) Loretta Barrett, our literary agent, was a successful editor at a major publishing company.
(132) In total he has written five novels, all of which have won literary acclaim and awards.
(133) Biography, bibliography and philology wait in attendance on literary appreciation; these four together cover the whole field of literary research.
(134) His literary style is representative of this highly charged emotional tone.
(135) The Faculty in those days was comparatively small, and still dominated by old men who were primarily literary historians.
(136) I therefore contacted a literary agent, Al Zuckerman, who had been introduced to me as the brother-in-law of a colleague.
(136)
(137) It is their very complexity and ambiguity of meaning which renders literary classics re-readable and thus classics.
(138) She landed in a literary publications class at the University of Baltimore, where the assignment was to produce a literary magazine.
(139) For Brooks, Wimsatt and Beardsley complexity and coherence together constitute the key considerations in the analysis of literary texts.
(140) When Amis became literary editor of the New Statesman, he appointed Barnes his deputy.
(141) Battles over the monetary and literary estate of the Fresno author began as soon as he died of cancer at age 72.
(142) On the other hand, these laws have the potential to suppress worthwhile literary and artistic expression.
(143) As far as literary theory is concerned, it is perhaps this more than anything else which constitutes the structuralist revolution.
(144) His visit to a literary dinner in Oxford was the only public appearance in this country.
(145) But in Hollywood there's a mini-fad for adaptations of literary classics.
(146) Her family, besieged by calls, retained New York literary agent Laurie Liss.
(147) The Times crossword calls for a certain amount of literary knowledge.
(148) None of the women who paid her tribute challenged the social and literary canons as she had done.
(149) The offices of the renowned Literary Review are well camouflaged.
(150) Indeed, it was the pressure from this large and disadvantaged constituency that helped to establish vernacular literary education.
(151) In doing so the literary canon is forced to change.
(152) My literary and academic background was something, I often felt, I was expected to apologise for.
(153) What flows from his pen in this book is a mixture of autobiography, literary theory, and metaphysical speculation.
(154) The artistic, literary value of adventure stories for the young is hampered by this kind of declaration of intent.
(155) This survey of personal experiences, ranging from close combat to literary society, constructs a memorable portrait of the last war.
(156) Quitting after a fracas he had gone to work as a literary agent and had prospered.
(157) I gave the novel to the literary agent Curtis Brown to negotiate with a publisher.
(158) The Anglo-Norman fabliaux are preserved in manuscripts that are miscellaneous literary anthologies.
(159) Nothing could be more reinforcing to a literary establishment which saw itself as amiable and permissive.
(160) What followed were long brainstorming sessions that finally yielded the Foxfire magazine in its original form as a school literary magazine.
(161) He was equally admired by literary critics, such as Southey and De Quincey.
(162) Nina, the literary agent, was on her way to London on business.
(163) John Pawsey describes a week in the life of a literary agent.
(164) On this point it seems that the Literary Digest Poll and others committed two errors.
(165) The tone of deference suggests that this person was a new acquaintance, and that Leapor respected her literary judgement.
(166) It is as if by working in Weston Hall,[sentence dictionary] Leapor came into contact with that family's modest literary tradition.
(167) Not only sociology and cultural anthropology but even a field like literary criticism increasingly becomes infested with the jargon of empirical addiction.
(168) Examining Spenser and Ireland, therefore, raises more questions about relations between literary texts and historical contexts than it resolves.
(169) Literary and artistic life was confined to this small circle.
(170) Simple start All seemed relatively simple at the start, recalls literary agent Alexandra Cann.
(171) What Albers did for Black Mountain as a community emphasizing the visual arts, Olson did for it as a literary community.
(172) The fact that it aims to provide a systematic account of time use is what distinguishes it from the literary diary.
(173) The junior adventure story has not suffered the same extremes of literary discrimination.
(174) Perhaps more than most literary encounters, it is essential to approach this novel with a cleared mind.
(175) There are several appreciative remarks about him by members of the literary and artistic circle.
(176) By 1920 she had proved herself by earning a living in a difficult world, and by winning recognition in literary circles.
(177) Few academic historians seem to care about the literary elegance that sustains the essay form.
(178) A literary composition in the form of a soliloquy.
(179) He used to be a literary agent.
(180) There is no highroad to literary appreciation.
(181) Therefore, ethical literary criticism to be open and dialogical.
(182) Translation of articles or journalistic, literary or scientific writings.
(183) Li Bai Li Po , one of the greatest poets in China's literary history.
(184) Decameron is a world - famous literary work in the Italian Renaissance period.
(185) In literary criticism the traditionalists were more articulate and aggressive.
(186) He is an inarticulate speaker, but is a man of literary taste.
(187) Victor Hugo , 1802 --- 1885 , was a celebrated French literary giant.
(188) David Lodge is a world - famous English novelist, literary critic, and editor.
(189) All the random mingling and idle talk made him hate literary parties.
(190) Goebbels felt at ease in the company of literary and movie people.
(191) President Lincoln's Gettysburg Address is widely read for their gifted literary expression.
(192) These inane literary works have no affinity to the masses.
(193) This is a literary giant Leo Tolstoy's works, always hanging in the professor's lips.
(194) Read a literary critic's appraisal is about: industrial civilization and the natural confrontation between civilizations.
(195) Inconstancy of life is the constant theme in Chinese and Japanese literary classics.
(196) John Updike is a copious writer having a great influence on the contemporary American literary history.
(197) S · Eliot is one of the most influential poet literary critic in the 20 th century.
(198) A distinctive effect or deft touch[http://], as in literary composition.
(199) He was a literary hack, naturally fast in pace and brilliant in action.
(200) As we all know, the development of hermeneutics enlarges the scopes of literary translation study.
(201) When she was 75 years old, Ting Ling reentered to literary circle.
(202) Joyce Carol Oates ( 1938 - ) is a renowned prolific female writer in the contemporary American literary circle.
(203) Katherine Mansfield is a genius woman writer on the literary history of world not allowing neglect.
(204) Want firm station position, hold to literary humanness civilian the service, direction that serves for socialism.
(205) The poetry industrialism now there's a literary line where you got to open up new territory.
(206) The English themselves are somewhat insular in their literary appraisals.
(207) T · S · Eliot is one of the most influential poet literary critic in the 20 th century.
(208) James Joyce is as one of the great literary pioneers the twentieth century.
(209) A literary image erases the more indolent images of perception.
(210) But then, the English themselves are somewhat insular in their literary appraisals.
(211) From literary criticism to theoretic construction is one of poetics production patterns.
(212) In the endless literary writing history, female and her body lengthily continue a depreciated destiny.
(213) John Millington Synge is considered the greatest dramatist of the Irish Literary Renaissance Movement.
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