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Перевод: declamatory
[прилагательное] ораторский; декламационный; напыщенный
Тезаурус:
- The cockney voice was declamatory, hierophantic.
- Embarrassed by the rash declamatory urgency of his past with The Jam, Weller wants to leave behind adolescence, and "progress" from gauche to smooth.
- I would not for a moment be without these sterling qualities but the imagery of this great movement is vivid and declamatory and Bach's intention was surely to arouse the passions of his audience.
- Glasser's prose is sometimes declamatory and sententious in an old-fashioned sort of way, and sometimes awkward ("Hidden in the near future, he was to be proved right").
- Later in the same chapter, at the point of death, Dickens breaks into a further kind of rhetoric, the declamatory rhetoric he reserves for moments of high drama: 5 The golden ripple on the wall came back again, and nothing else stirred in the room (1).
- Jackie placed one hand on his heart and raised the other in an elegant declamatory gesture.
- Also in January 1950, Sukarno paid a state visit to India which was returned by Nehru in June: in a typically ruminative speech (so different from Sukarno's declamatory style) Nehru told his audience, Politicians are accustomed to making this kind of speech on a foreign tour, but we may believe that Nehru, with his almost mystical sense of Asianness, meant every word.
- The declamatory style of writing (which now seems dated) too often obscured the probity of the Situationist's critique of the alienating and manipulative effects of late capitalism and its creation of pseudo-needs.
- Yet patriotism is the easiest of declamatory prejudices.
- Even this belongs to a type that one might call the "declamatory madrigal" (cf.
- Dr. Kerr had said that they had not done so - but he was "too wordy and declamatory for a witness".
- The texts themselves are inspirational, but Beyer's lettering style for this commission, which treated each letter as a piece of incised sculpture in its own right, greatly adds to their declamatory power.
- More noteworthy is the declamatory freedom with which rhythms are interpreted - not only in the long solos for the second piano but also when these are accompanied by the most complicated rhythmic canons in the other instrument.
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