Similar words: literally, contemporary, to the contrary, elite, military, on the contrary, satellite, jupiter. Meaning: ['lɪtərerɪ /'lɪtrərɪ] adj. 1. of or relating to or characteristic of literature 2. knowledgeable about literature 3. appropriate to literature rather than everyday speech or writing.
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(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) Sentencedict.com 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.
More similar words: literally, contemporary, to the contrary, elite, military, on the contrary, satellite, jupiter, criteria, after all, veteran, interact, inveterate, interaction, after a while, one after another, little by little, vary, diary, scary, salary, summary, primary, cite, site, item, boundary, split, unite, suite.