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Milton in a sentence

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Sentence count:210+2Posted:2019-07-13Updated:2020-07-24
Similar words: hamiltonmilton friedmanalexander hamiltonstiltonfail tofail to dothe devil to paymiltMeaning: n. English poet; remembered primarily as the author of an epic poem describing humanity's fall from grace (1608-1674). 
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121, Milton wrote his epic in lines of unrhymed iambic pentameter or what we call, and what Milton would have called, blank verse.
122, John Milton , English poet , notably Paradise Lost , was born in London.
123, I think in a lot of ways - and this could probably be said of Spenser as well - Milton is attracted to the excavation project.
124, Milton pushes this image even further into indistinctness with an instance of his famous deployment of the conjunction or.
125, The system of negative income tax was firstly proposed by Milton Friedman of Chicago University, and developed by economists in the west later.
126, After Grub Street , London, former name of Milton Street, where such writers lived.
127, Virgil had written a poem in the Sixth Eclogue that had touched Milton, and it had touched Milton, I think, because it begins with Virgil's own brooding meditation on the course of his poetic career.
128, The only thing that matters is the salvation of the incorporeal, the bodiless soul, but Milton is so unorthodox, or at least heterodox, in his insistence on the importance of the body in this poem.
129, American composer Milton Babbitt's piano work Partitions showed his technical features of serial music composition.
130, We have already encountered on some level the importance of the figure of eating to John Milton. Think of Comus.Sentence dictionary
131, The greatness of Milton's epic was immediately recognized, and the admiring comments of the respected poets John Dryden and Andrew Marvell helped restore Milton to favor.
132, It is hard not to be impressed by an author who alludes to Milton on one page, then turns to the charms of the National Municipal Accounting Manual on another.
133, Milton rather late in his life has become a monist.
134, It's almost as if we can hear Milton say, after he's given his own really quite elaborate display of allegorical poetry, "Thus Spenser relates, erring."
135, Milton wrote his three major poetical works: Paradise Lost , Paradise Regained, and Samson Agonistes.
136, Power is a conceptual category that Milton brooded on and cultivated his entire writing life.
137, We looked at its relation to the new career that John Milton ended up assuming in the late 1630s: this new career as a polemical writer of political prose.
138, It was a fertile time for art (Rembrandt, Vermeer) and literature (Racine, Moliere, Milton, Pascal) and unfortunately, bad philosophy (Hobbes, Locke).
139, Just a generation ago, the mark of acivilised person was an appreciation of Shakespeare, Milton, Goethe, Thucydides, Rembrandt and Beethoven.
140, Now we will never know, and don't let anyone ever suggest to you that you will ever know, what Milton could possibly mean by this deliberately perplexing image of the two-handed engine at the door.
141, Paradise Lost is an epic poem in blank verse by the 17 th - century English poet John Milton.
142, He's a better teacher than Scotus or Aquinas, and the text seems almost to suggest that Milton can't do without his own teacher, Edmund Spenser.
143, Lycidas' untimely death seems to enable Milton to master his own fears of untimeliness.
144, Friedman Milton. The Need for Futures Markets in Currencies. Chicago: International Monetary Market of the Chicago Mercantile Exchange, 1971.
145, John Milton: Overrated. Biochemically no different than eating large quantities of chocolate.
146, Milton claims that epic poetry is the highest ambition for a poet and then he goes on to explain how it is that the epic poet should comport himself.
147, John Milton has made a mistake. He's made a literary mistake and, as I think all editors know, Spenser does not.
148, Milton shows us he's fully escaped from the repetitiveness of the "yet once more"-beginning.
149, Milton has to justify or at least understand this seemingly incomprehensible and unjustifiable event. It's this drive to theodicy that accounts for the poem's most painful moments.
150, Milton would insert into the printed text of his poem his own anticipation that his epic would receive the same universal approbation as Homer's and Virgil's.
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