Similar words: romantic, briticism, criticism, asceticism, fanaticism, skepticism, semantics, anticipate. Meaning: [rə'mæntɪsɪzm] n. 1. impractical romantic ideals and attitudes 2. a movement in literature and art during the late 18th and early 19th centuries that celebrated nature rather than civilization 3. an exciting and mysterious quality (as of a heroic time or adventure).
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1. This kind of romanticism is everywhere in Buchan's books.
2. Her determined romanticism was worrying me.
3. Bella's puncturing of William's nostalgic romanticism with her admission that she never really fancied him.
4. Storni used earlier poetic movements, namely Romanticism and modernism, as models for her poetry.
5. Finance is again king(sentencedict.com), cemented by romanticism about retaining political sovereignty over the pound and laced with not a little xenophobia.
6. Romanticism-Maturationism Romanticism has its roots in the writings of Jean-Jacques Rousseau.
7. He follows Cohen's bittersweet romanticism with a solid dose of Sonic Youth.
8. Romanticism represents the freeing of feelings, instinct and sentiment in opposition to reasoned objectivity.
9. The postmodernists rejected this viewpoint, however, as excessive romanticism, but Peto would surely not have cared.
10. His poetry tended towards a dreamy romanticism.
11. Beneath this romanticism, however , a stark reality.
12. This phenomenon was severely criticized by humanism and romanticism.
13. William Blake is an important representative in English romanticism.
14. William Blake was a forerunner of Romanticism.
15. He leans artistically towards romanticism.
16. European Romanticism, rephrased for the American democracy, posed a revolutionary threat to a rationalist é lite.
16. Sentencedict.com try its best to gather and create good sentences.
17. Meanwhile, Americanism sets a heavy cultural foundation for American romanticism with its own national characteristics.
18. The beauty of nature and human feelings were important ideas in romanticism.
19. With both laughter and irritation Phoebe had returned to consciousness ironically amused at how nature could behave with such excessive romanticism.
20. Yet even if Frankenstein had never been invented, Mary Shelley would continue to attract interest as the favoured child of romanticism.
21. Before he died from cancer in 1991, he had produced a mammoth body of beautiful work steeped in lyricism and romanticism.
22. Like Benno Moiseiwitsch, Cortot confessed to a special affection for Schumann, whose music is at the very heart of romanticism.
23. The image of ragtag Vietminh guerrillas persisted, but it was pure romanticism.
24. It is in one movement, imbued throughout with profound melancholy, yet breathing a spirit of Viennese romanticism.
25. Symptoms of reversion to primitive superstition about death are contemporaneous with Romanticism.
26. It effectively conjured up the mixture of religion, fighting prowess and romanticism which the Legion held so dear.
27. When I was an undergraduate student studying sociology we were all warned of the dangers of romanticism.
28. The new artistic climate found Minton striving to restrain his romanticism beneath taut design.
29. There, during the war, the Allies were caught up in a jumble of intrigue, political romanticism and oriental exoticism.
30. Revelling in colour and contrast, drama and dissonance, boldness and individualism, it was the architectural legacy of Romanticism.
More similar words: romantic, briticism, criticism, asceticism, fanaticism, skepticism, semantics, anticipate, infanticide, anticipation, Roman, romance, cynicism, pax romana, aromatic, necromancer, chromatic, achromatic, monochromatic, ferromagnetic, electromagnetic, dismantle, enticing, electromagnetic wave, frantic, mercantilism, participant, gigantic, atlantic, pedantic.