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Dramatic   /drəmˈætɪk/   Listen
adjective
Dramatical, Dramatic  adj.  
1.
Of or pertaining to the drama; as, dramatic arts.
2.
Suitable to or characteristic of or having the qualities of, a drama; theatrical; as, a dramatic entrance in a swirling cape; a dramatic rescue at sea. Opposite of undramatic. (Narrower terms: melodramatic; awe-inspiring, spectacular) "The emperor... performed his part with much dramatic effect."
3.
Striking in appearance or effect; vivid; having a thrilling effect; as, a dramatic sunset; a dramatic pause.
Synonyms: spectacular, striking.
4.
(Music) Marked by power and expressiveness and a histrionic or theatrical style; of a singer or singing voice; as, a dramatic tenor; a dramatic soprano. Contrasted to lyric.






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Dramatic" Quotes from Famous Books



... and seen many pictures, and they will visit other galleries and see many more pictures before their return home. They have read guide-books, noting the stars and double stars; they have dipped into histories of art and volumes of criticism. They have been told to observe the dramatic force of Giotto, the line of Botticelli, the perfect composition of Raphael, the color of Titian; all this they have done punctiliously. They know in a vague way that Giotto was much earlier than Raphael, that Botticelli ...
— The Gate of Appreciation - Studies in the Relation of Art to Life • Carleton Noyes

... and brilliant work of the Romanticists had reached its height in the compositions just studied, it seemed as if there were nothing more for music to do. Wagner, with his special dramatic aims and gorgeous coloring, loomed so large on the horizon that for a time all other music was dwarfed. It is, therefore of real significance that just in this interregnum two men, born in the early years ...
— Music: An Art and a Language • Walter Raymond Spalding

... December 21, 1639. He was educated at the College of Beauvais, at the great Jansenist school at Port Royal, and at the College d'Harcourt. He attracted notice by an ode written for the marriage of Louis XIV in 1660, and made his first really great dramatic success with his "Andromaque." His tragic masterpieces include "Britannicus," "Berenice," "Bajazet," "Mithridate," "Iphigenie," and "Phaedre," all written between 1669 and 1677. Then for some years he gave up dramatic composition, disgusted by the intrigues ...
— Phaedra • Jean Baptiste Racine

... Bo Cuailgne, you seem (as you do in the Mahabharata) to be standing upon actual memories, as much historical as symbolic. Here all the figures, though titanic, are at least half human, with a definite character assigned to all of importance. They revel in huge dramatic action; move in an heroic mistless sunlight. You can take part in the daily life of the Red Branch champions as you can in that of the Greeks before Troy; they seem real and clear-cut; you can almost remember Deirdre's beauty and ...
— The Crest-Wave of Evolution • Kenneth Morris

... your readers inform me who possesses the copy of Langbaine's Account of the English Dramatic Poets with MS. additions, and copious continuations, by the REV. ROGERS RUDING? In one of his notes, speaking of the Garrick collection of old plays, that industrious ...
— Notes and Queries, Number 55, November 16, 1850 • Various


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