释义 |
apersonwho writesplays 剧作家,戏剧家SMART Vocabulary: related words and phrasesLiterature - action hero
- alliterative
- alternative history
- anapest
- anti-literary
- femslash
- fictionality
- fictive
- free verse
- genre fiction
- ode
- passion play
- pentameter
- poem
- poesy
- tartan noir
- theatrics
- topos
- tragedy
- tragicomic
See more results » You can also find related words, phrases, and synonyms in the topics: People who write for work or pleasure (Definition ofdramatistfrom theCambridge Advanced Learner's Dictionary & Thesaurus© Cambridge University Press)- Jonson's scholarship was thorough, but sweetened and ventilated by his activities as poet and dramatist.
- The answer to this question is not simply that the modern dramatist is seldom a Shakespeare.
- The genius for story-telling is just the genius which is incapable of being a fine dramatist.
- This, unfortunately, could not, in the sense in which the word "good" was then meant, be said of most modern dramatists.
- Throughout the present discussion, I have insisted on the point that the great dramatists have always written primarily for the many.
dramatist| American Dictionaryawriterofplays,esp.seriousones (Definition ofdramatistfrom theCambridge Academic Content Dictionary© Cambridge University Press)Examplesofdramatistdramatist Novelists and dramatists put hitherto taboo dialogue into the mouths of characters whose real counterparts would be unlikely to use it.From theCambridge English Corpus Yet, paradoxically, through utilizing melodramatic convention, dramatists were able to focus attention on the plight of the child worker.From theCambridge English Corpus But the natural-sounding dialogue written by a good novelist ordramatistis not really natural at all, but is actually highly artificial.From theCambridge English Corpus We are introduced, via biographical detail, interviews and a brief overview of the dramatist's main concerns, to each of these writers' works.From theCambridge English Corpus Few dramatists wrote only plays, while some even engaged in anti-theatrical polemic.From theCambridge English Corpus The creation of a boundary on the stage, ironically, made the possibilities for what thedramatistcould achieve in the theatre virtually boundless.From theCambridge English Corpus Euripides greatly expanded the set of established relationships between particular speech acts and forms of musical expression that were available to adramatist.From theCambridge English Corpus However, there is no evidence that the fifth-century dramatists imparted lines, gestures, and choreography to performers by any means other than personal demonstration.From theCambridge English Corpus Perhaps it is time that is wanting, in that dramatists are working under undue pressure to create instant culture for an impatient new nation.From theCambridge English Corpus Yet there are precedents of dramatists benefiting from apprenticeships writing brief, non-realistic one-act plays.From theCambridge English Corpus Rather, music played a minor role, thedramatistmaintaining full control by calling in musicians only for certain numbers - after the script had been completed.From theCambridge English Corpus Noting that competition for aid would be more fierce, the dramatists prepared themselves for some difficult times.From theCambridge English Corpus It encompasses critics and musicians while it excludes writers, painters, and dramatists.From theCambridge English Corpus The wife of an evacuateddramatistis standing outside their building when a refugee approaches.From theCambridge English Corpus Euripides is the keydramatistfor her argument.From theCambridge English Corpus These examples are from corpora and from sources on the web. Any opinions in the examples do not represent the opinion of the Cambridge Dictionary editors or of Cambridge University Press or its licensors. #https://dictionary.cambridge.org//dictionary/english/dramatist## |