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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(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.
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.