单词 | classic |
释义 | classicadj.n. A. adj. I. Of acknowledged excellence or importance. 1. = classical adj. 1a; of or relating to Greek and Roman antiquity in general. Now rare. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > the arts > the arts in general > [adjective] > specific movement or period classical1546 pastoral1566 classic1597 Medicean1652 romantic1812 tedesco1814 realistic1829 realista1832 pseudo-classic1833 classicist1838 pseudo-classical1838 renaissant1839 modernist1848 post-classic1850 post-classical1851 pseudo-Gothic1853 classicizing1865 classicistic1866 serio-grotesque1873 geometric1877 neoclassical1877 modernistic1878 neoclassic1878 pseudo-archaic1878 William Morris1883 protocorinthian1884 veristic1884 William and Mary1886 Yuan1888 romanticistic1889 veritistic1894 auto-destructive1895 pre-Romantic1895 Trajanic1906 neo-realistic1909 New Romantic1909 neo-realist1912 futuristic1915 postmodern1916 Dada1918 Dadaist1918 surrealist1918 proto-Romantic1920 expressionistic1921 modernista1924 super-realist1925 superrealistic1925 postmodernist1926 proto-Baroque1926 post-symbolist1927 pre-modernist1927 surrealistic1930 Renaissancist1932 Colonial Revival1934 neo-baroque1935 socialist-realist1935 social realist1949 social realistic1949 kitchen sink1954 William IV1955 formalistic1957 Zhdanovite1957 neo-Dadaist1960 neo-modernist1960 William Morrisy1960 neo-Dada1962 Zhdanovist1966 conceptual1969 conceptualist1973 po-mo1987 pathetic1990 the world > time > relative time > the past > historical period > [adjective] > of Greek or Roman antiquity classic1597 ancient1605 Constantinian1641 classical1691 post-classical1851 pre-classical1860 pre-Roman1863 post-Roman1865 preclassic1869 Hadrianic1886 Protogeometric1914 sub-Roman1932 society > leisure > the arts > literature > a written composition > [adjective] > monumental or classic classic1597 classical1599 monumental1894 1597 Bp. J. Hall Virgidemiarum: 1st 3 Bks. ii. iii. 34 Since pedling Barbarismes gan be in request, Nor classicke tongues, nor learning found no rest. a1602 W. Perkins Comm. Epist. Gal. (1604) vi. 657 Neither Plinie (who writ after Paul) nor any other ancient classique author, doth make mention of Phrigia Pacaciana. 1628 J. Earle Micro-cosmogr. xxxiii. sig. F11 His Table is spred wide with some Classicke Folio. 1646 Sir T. Browne Pseudodoxia Epidemica v. xiii. 253 Nor is there any genuine or classick word in Latine to expresse them; for staphia or stapes is not to be found in Authors of Antiquity. 1694 M. M. in W. Sancroft Occas. Serm. p. xiii He had a peculiar Talent, being an admirable Critic in all the Antient and Classic Knowledge, both among the Greeks and Romans. 1712 R. Steele Spectator No. 330. ⁋4 All the Boys in the School, but I, have the Classick Authors in usum Delphini, gilt and letter'd on the Back. 1713 H. Felton Diss. Reading Classics 55 With them the genius of classick learning dwelleth. 1793 S. T. Coleridge in Weekly Entertainer 21 Oct. 406 Where grac'd with many a classic sport Cam rolls his reverend stream along. 1856 R. W. Emerson Eng. Traits xv. 266 The academic elegance, and classic allusion, which adorn its columns. 1866 C. Kingsley Hereward the Wake I. xii. 241 He had never felt the influence of classic civilization. 1878 H. M. Stanley Through Dark Continent I. xvii. 457 Another statue to rival the classic Antinous. 1956 Times 1 Mar. 5/3 The Roman warriors and matrons are marshalled in their classic landscape with as much ease as ingenuity. 2003 K. M. Campbell Marriage & Family in Biblical World iii. 105 The translation here and for all classic literature is that given in the Loeb Classical Library. 2. a. Of the first class, of the highest rank or importance; constituting an acknowledged standard or model; of enduring interest and value. ΘΚΠ the mind > goodness and badness > quality of being good > excellence > [adjective] > very excellent or first-rate gildenc1225 prime1402 rare1483 grand1542 holy1599 pre-excelling1600 paregal1602 classic1604 of (the) first rate1650 solary1651 first rate1674 superb1720 tip-top1722 tip-top-gallant1730 swell1819 topping1822 of the first (also finest, best, etc.) water1826 No. 11829 brag1836 A11837 A No. 11838 number one1839 awful1843 bully1851 first class1852 class1867 champion1880 too1881 tipping1887 alpha plus1898 bonzer1898 grade A1911 gold star1917 world-ranking1921 five-star1936 too much1937 first line1938 vintage1939 supercolossal1947 top1953 alpha1958 fantabulous1959 beauty1963 supercool1965 world-class1967 primo1973 the mind > goodness and badness > quality of being good > pre-eminence > [adjective] > of highest rank or importance classical1599 classic1604 1604 R. Cawdrey Table Alphabet. Chassick [sic: corrected to classick in 1609], chiefe, and approued. 1628 J. Doughty Church Schismes in Disc. Divine Myst. 23 Yet would he by no meanes commend it for a classicke tenent [= tenet]. 1644 J. Milton Of Educ. 4 But in Latin we have none of classic authoritie extant. 1670 G. Havers tr. G. Leti Il Cardinalismo di Santa Chiesa i. iii. 86 Classick writings in the Oriental Tongues. 1728 E. Young Love of Fame: Universal Passion (ed. 2) i. 87 Some a classic fame demand, For heaping up with a laborious hand, A waggon-load of meanings for one word. 1845 J. P. Nichol Archit. Heavens (1851) 209 An investigation..carried out with a skill and perseverance which must render it ever classic in astronomy. 1882 C. Pebody Eng. Journalism x. 73 The Morning Chronicle..soon became..the classic authority upon all questions of Parliamentary reporting. 1906 Science 21 Sept. 374/2 Franklin's classic experiment with the electrical kite..was performed..during the summer of 1752. 1949 A. E. Trueman Geol. & Scenery Eng. & Wales xii. 168 The modifications..have been worked out in great detail by the late Professor P. F. Kendall in his classic work in Yorkshire. 1986 Daily Tel. 13 June 14/2 Mr Lewis's classic piece of investigative reporting..is journalism of a very high order. 2002 J. C. Wharton Nature Cures iii. 60 The principles of homeopathy were presented most thoroughly and systematically in Hahnemann's classic text . b. Archetypal; very typical of its kind, representative. ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > order > agreement, harmony, or congruity > conformity to or with a pattern, etc. > [adjective] > conforming to a standard rule > standard canonical1553 canonial1589 normal1598 standard1603 legitimate1615 classic1648 legitime1651 classical1751 canonic1850 normative1852 1648 J. Beaumont Psyche ix. lviii. 141 Beef and Mutton, and such classick Meats. 1821 Ld. Byron Don Juan: Canto III xvii. 11 Light classic articles of female want, French stuffs, lace, tweezers, toothpicks, teapot, tray. 1883 M. K. Waddington Let. 27 May (1903) i. 83 First there was the ‘classic’ group..W. and I seated in front, with all the gentlemen standing around us. 1916 R. H. Fife German Empire between two Wars 308 The epic period of the new empire found its classic expression in the..monument to the first emperor. 1926 Geogr. Rev. 16 392 This precipitousness of slopes is of course a classic product of the desert climate. 1964 Internat. Psychiatry Clinics 1 743 Many of these cases can be grouped into the classic forms of schizophrenia. 1970 Guardian 22 Aug. 3/8 The baguette..is the classic French loaf. By law it must weigh 250 grammes. 2007 New Scientist 14 Apr. 48/2 This field of around 200 houses is a classic example of exurban development. 3. a. Of or relating to the lands inhabited by the ancient Greeks and Romans and made famous through their literature and history. Frequently in classic ground. ΚΠ 1703 J. Addison Let. from Italy 1701 2 Poetick fields encompass me around, And still I seem to tread on classick ground. 1748 D. Hume Let. 11 May (1932) I. 132 We are now in Classic Ground; & I have kist the Earth, that produc'd Virgil. 1833 H. Coleridge Biographia Borealis 7 Milton, then a young and enamoured roamer in classic lands. 1885 M. Arnold Disc. in Amer. 182 The ear loves names of foreign and classic topography. 1914 E. Wharton Let. 1 May (1988) 321 We crossed from Tunis on a craft..which must have been launched before the victorious Greek galleys ploughed the waves on that classic coast. 1956 Times 28 Aug. 5/6 Artists such as Claude of Lorraine..painted on classic ground, that is to say, in Rome and its environs. 1994 T. Clark Junkets on Sad Planet 148 He got ready to board the boat that Would take him off to that classic land [sc. Italy] to die. b. In extended use: renowned for literary or historical associations. Now frequently in classic ground. Classic City n. a city regarded as a cultural or literary centre; (U.S.) (with the) Boston, Massachusetts; (later also) Athens, Georgia. ΘΚΠ the mind > attention and judgement > esteem > reputation > fame or renown > famous or eminent person > [adjective] > historically famous olda1325 classical1546 classic1787 society > leisure > the arts > literature > prose > narrative or story > [adjective] > mentioned in stories classic1787 classical1820 1787 R. Burns Let. 23 Apr. (2001) I. 107 After a few pilgrimages over some of the classic ground of Caledonia. 1817 S. C. Walford Recoll. Ramble 22 I had to quit Oxford... It was very early on a summer's morning,..when I took my farewell of the inhabitants of this classic city. 1833 A. Opie Diary in C. L. Brightwell Memorials Life A. Opie (1854) 315 In spite of my admiration of that river [sc. the Tweed], I did not relish the idea of being drowned in its classic waters. 1859 Ladies' Repository Jan. 51/1 Boston is the ‘Classic City’, the ‘Modern Athens’, and the ‘Literary Emporium’, from its acknowledged pre-eminence in the literary and fine-art pursuits. 1875 W. S. Jevons Money (1878) 263 In the classic financial neighbourhood of Lombard Street. 1902 Atlanta Constit. 25 May (Sunny South section) 2/5 He is said to have been discovered purchasing certain savory sausage sandwiches between meals from a dusky vendor who conveys them about the Classic City. 1948 Times 2 Oct. 5/7 To the naturalist Unst is in its way classic ground. Thomas Edmonston, who published ‘Flora of Shetland’..was born here. 1994 Atlanta Jrnl. & Constit. (Nexis) 5 Sept. c6 With two Olympic venues slated for the Classic City,..thousands of people will be visiting Athens for the first time. 2007 W. Franklin James Fenimore Cooper xiv. 438 A century of struggle between France and his homeland..had made this area into classic ground. 4. = classical adj. 7. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > the arts > the arts in general > [adjective] > qualities of works generally wateryc1230 polite?a1500 meagre1539 over-laboured1579 bald1589 spiritless1592 light1597 meretricious1633 standing1661 effectual1662 airy1664 severe1665 correct1676 enervatea1704 free1728 classic1743 academic1752 academical1752 chaste1753 nerveless1763 epic1769 crude1786 effective1790 creative1791 soulless1794 mannered1796 manneristical1830 manneristic1837 subjective1840 inartisticala1849 abstract1857 inartistic1859 literary1900 period1905 atmospheric1908 dateless1908 atmosphered1920 non-naturalistic1925 self-indulgent1926 free-styled1933 soft-centred1935 freestyle1938 pseudish1938 decadent1942 post-human1944 kitschy1946 faux-naïf1958 spare1965 society > leisure > the arts > literature > literary world > [adjective] > literary movement, school, or theory classic1743 classical1784 Alexandrian1803 romantic1812 realistic1829 realista1832 romanticist1831 symbolistic1864 symbolistical1864 neo-romantic1875 naturalistic1876 Alexandrine1877 neoclassical1877 veristic1884 impressionistic1886 impressionary1889 romanticistic1889 sensitivist1891 veritistic1894 Félibrian1908 symbolic1910 vorticist1914 Dada1918 Dadaist1918 surrealist1918 postmodernist1926 surrealistic1930 ultraist1931 socialist-realist1935 lettrist1947 social realist1949 social realistic1949 formalist1955 1743 W. Collins Verses to T. Hanmer 8 And classic Judgment gain'd to sweet Racine The temp'rate Strength of Maro's chaster Line. 1762 R. Hurd Lett. Chivalry & Romance vii. 56 He [sc. Spenser] could have planned, no doubt, an heroic design on the exact classic model. 1814 Q. Rev. Oct. 113 To distinguish the productions of antiquity by the appellation of classic, those of modern times by that of romantic. 1841 R. W. Emerson in Waldie's Sel. Circulating Libr. July 4/1 The vaunted distinction between Greek and English, between Classic and Romantic seems superficial and pedantic. 1878 J. Morley Carlyle 159 That permanence, which is only secured by classic form. 1941 P. H. Lang Music in Western Civilization xv. 746 In Beethoven classicism became romantic, and in Schubert romanticism became classic. 1984 Times Lit. Suppl. 18 May 540/4 His way of writing, his pouncing, wiredrawn, improvisatory eloquence, amounts to a classic style. 5. Of a person's facial features or looks: reminiscent of the ancient Greek or Roman ideal; (hence also) of a timeless or unquestionable beauty. ΚΠ 1774 Resignation 6 Old Trusler lab'ring in thy praise, Of paragraphs a crown would raise, To deck thy classic brow. 1822 London Mag. Mar. 239/2 Charles Kemble, with his fine, earnest, and classic features, and his noble figure, might meet a Roman in the market-place, and be deemed a true dweller by the Tiber. 1847 C. Brontë Jane Eyre III. iii. 90 It was like a Greek face, very pure in outline; quite a straight, classic nose; quite an Athenian mouth and chin. 1888 M. E. Crowther Courtenay Harrison's Early Struggles i. 6 Her son resembles her somewhat, but is of a more robust build, and, though a good-looking boy, has not her classic beauty. 1920 L. Perkins Cross of Ares 11 I caught his face in profile and noted the fine straight line of brow and nose, and rounded classic chin. 1968 Life 6 Sept. 69/3 He has an erect and jaunty carriage, white hair, a classic profile, heavy dark brows and burning brown eyes. 2009 N.Y. Rev. Bks. 12 Mar. 47/2 (advt.) Passionate brunette—long legs, slender, good figure, classic features, very Ava Gardner-esque. 6. Also with capital initial. Of or relating to a traditional race, contest, or sporting tournament having special significance and honorific value; (British) of or relating to any one of the five main annual flat races for horses in Britain (see note at sense B. 4). ΚΠ 1878 Times 1 Oct. 9/3 The autumn handicaps invariably attract more attention, in a speculative sense, than the classic races. 1889 Times 7 Nov. 8/3 The last of Lord Falmouth's ‘classic’ winners was Galliard, who in 1883 carried off the Two Thousand Guineas. 1928 Daily Gleaner (Kingston, Jamaica) 20 Mar. 16/4 Family No. 1 the daughter of Lemonora is entered in all five Classic Races. 1951 Times 26 June 6/5 The King won the King George V challenge trophy in the annual classic race for pigeons from Lerwick, Shetland Islands on Saturday. 1972 Albuquerque (New Mexico) Tribune 12 June c1 An instant's error in trying to pass a slower car..cast a pall over the victory..of his old teammate, Graham Hill, in the classic race yesterday. 2003 N.Y. Times (National ed.) 18 May ix. 13/1 She is also an on-scene reporter when the station covers the Hampton Classic Horse Show. 7. a. Of an article, esp. of clothing, or its design: of a simple, elegant style not greatly subject to changes in fashion. ΘΚΠ the world > textiles and clothing > clothing > types or styles of clothing > [adjective] > other smalleOE lightc1230 round1402 side-necked1430 wanton1489 Spanish1530 tucked1530 lustya1555 civil1582 open-breasted1598 full1601 everlasting1607 sheeten1611 nothinga1616 burly1651 pin-up1677 slouching1691 double-breasted1701 negligée1718 translated1727 uniform1746 undress1777 single-breasted1796 unworn1798 mamalone1799 costumic1801 safeguard1822 Tom and Jerry1830 lightweight1837 fancy dress1844 wrap-1845 hen-skin1846 Mary Stuart1846 well-cut1849 mousquetaire1851 empire1852 costumary1853 solid1859 spring weight1869 Henri II1870 western1881 hard-boiled1882 man-of-war1883 Henley1886 demi-season1890 Gretchen1890 toreador1892 crossover1893 French cut1896 drifty1897 boxy1898 Buster Brown1902 Romney1903 modistic1907 Peter Pan1908 classic1909 Fauntleroy1911 baby doll1912 flared1928 flare1929 tuck-in1929 unpressed1932 Edwardian1934 swingy1937 topless1937 wraparound1937 dressed-down1939 cover-up1942 Sun Yat-sen1942 utility1942 non-utility1948 sudsable1951 off-the-shoulder1953 peasant1953 flareless1954 A-line1955 matador1955 stretch1956 wash-and-wear1959 layered1962 Tom Jones1964 Carnaby Street1965 Action Man1966 Mao-style1967 wear-dated1968 thermal1970 bondage1980 swaggery1980 hoochie1990 mitumba1990 kinderwhore1994 1909 N.Y. Times 31 Oct. 53/4 A tunic draping over a classic skirt of brilliant blue chiffon cloth. 1938 Amer. Home Jan. 73/1 The cornice of royal blue linoleum with a white classic design makes an effective contrast. 1960 Guardian 21 July 7/7 Among the..long evening dresses there are..a large proportion of ‘classic’ models. 1993 Canad. Living June 27/1 Classic clothes in natural colors..have easy, elegant lines. b. Designating an older motor vehicle of acknowledged quality, esp. of a type sought after by collectors. Chiefly in classic car. ΚΠ 1951 Chicago Sunday Tribune 8 July iii. 4/5 Classic automobiles will include open or convertible body styles and closed models. 1960 Life 28 Mar. 108/2 Sports car owners should not be confused with their more stately counterparts, the ‘classic car’ owners. 1988 E. Dodge Numerol. has your Number 171 Invest in classic cars that have resale value. 1995 Observer 19 Nov. 12/6 Choice investment possibilities in classic motorbikes are also highlighted. 2008 J. E. Lloyd Take me to Bed iii. 57 Jessica stroked the supple leather seat beneath her, silently wondering how he could afford to ‘restore’ a classic car like this one. 8. With capital initial. Of or relating to a period of advanced Mesoamerican civilization (c300–900), esp. to that of the Mayas. Cf. post-classic adj. 2, preclassic adj. 2. ΘΚΠ the world > people > ethnicities > Indian of Central or South America > [adjective] > peoples of Central America > specific period pre-Hispanic1908 classic1928 preclassic1945 post-classic1956 1928 Proc. National Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 14 508 Prior to the development of the classic Maya culture. 1956 S. G. Morley Anc. Maya (rev. ed.) iii. 40 Maya civilization, as the term is used in this book, refers only to the culture of the Classic stage. 1978 Times Atlas World Hist. 46/3 The conventional starting date for the Classic Period of Meso-american civilisation is ad 300, a time of intellectual and artistic climax. 2005 R. E. W. Adams Prehistoric Mesoamerica viiii. 337 The Lacandones until recently made prayers and burned incense in special burners in the Classic temples at Yaxchilan. 9. = classical adj. 3. Obsolete. ΘΚΠ society > faith > church government > ecclesiastical discipline > court > presbyterian > [adjective] > presbytery consistorial1561 presbyterial1591 consistorian1593 classical1607 Presbyterian1607 classic1646 presbyteral1651 1646 T. Edwards 1st & 2nd Pt. Gangræna (ed. 3) 42 He will at random, and blindefold undertake to finde as many in a far lesse number of my Classique Proselytes and party. 1649 J. Milton Tenure of Kings 6 While the hope to bee made Classic and Provinciall Lords led them on. 1673 J. Milton On New Forcers of Conscience in Poems (new ed.) 69 To force our Consciences that Christ set free, And ride us with a classic Hierarchy. B. n. 1. a. A writer, artist, musician, etc., of acknowledged importance and quality. Now rare. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > the arts > music > composing music > composer > [noun] > of first rank classic1664 society > leisure > the arts > literature > writer or author > [noun] > writer of first rank classic1718 1664 J. Birchensha tr. J. H. Alsted Templum Musicum 94 Consider those melopoetic Classic's and prime Musicians, Orlandus and Marentius. 1718 C. Gildon Compl. Art Poetry I. Pref. sig. a7v Mr. Dryden, and Mr. Milton..whom he himself has with so much Justice made English Classics. 1782 J. Warton Ess. on Pope (new ed.) II. xi. 280 That happy Horatian mixture of jest and earnest, that contribute to place Despreaux at the head of modern classics. 1841 I. D'Israeli Amenities Lit. I. 163 Dante was the classic of his country. 1889 G. B. Shaw How to become Musical Critic (1960) 160 Wagner did not succeed in putting dulness out of countenance until he became a classic himself. 1990 G. C. Chesbro Lang. of Cannibals v. 87 At least a dozen of his songs had become classics; he had become a classic. b. A work of literature, music, or art of acknowledged quality and enduring significance or popularity. In extended use: something which is memorable and an outstanding example of its kind. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > the arts > literature > a written composition > [noun] > monumental or classic classic1763 monument1852 society > leisure > the arts > music > piece of music > type of piece > [noun] > classic or standard standard1895 classic1904 1763 H. Walpole Vertue's Anecd. Painting III. i. 15 Sir Peter Lely,..whose works are admitted amongst the classics of the art. 1785 R. Cumberland Nat. Son ii. 29 Phoebe. And what books do you chiefly read, pray?—poetry, history, philosophy? Jack. All's one for that; the Racing Calendar, Cock fighter's Guide, Complete Angler, and the rest of the classics. 1836 G. Dubourg Violin ix. 266 The later Tyrolese makers have been rendered the great source of deception..their instruments having been made to pass as classics. 1864 J. R. Lowell Fireside Trav. 170 Naked sun meets naked sea, the true classic of nature. 1879 J. Legge Sacred Bks. East III. p. xxiii I have rendered both the names by ‘God’ in all the volumes of the Chinese Classics thus far translated. 1904 Musical Times 45 329/1 The re-orchestration, here and there, of the classics in music. 1934 C. Lambert Music Ho! iii. 191 We cannot live perpetually in the rarefied atmosphere of the austerer classics. 1950 R. P. Blesh & H. Janis They all played Ragtime ii. 44 The ragtime pianists were already ‘wowing’ their audiences with syncopated renderings of the classics. 1967 A. Villiers Captain Cook vi. 104 Cook's passage in the Endeavour to the Horn..was a classic. 1991 E. Lindros & R. Starkman Fire on Ice (1992) xi. 198 It was a real yawner. The game wound up in a 3-3 tie. It certainly wasn't a classic. 2006 D. H. Erwin Extinction ii. 46 A short book that has become one of the classics of ecology. 2. a. An ancient Greek or Latin writer or literary work, of the first rank and of acknowledged excellence; any one of a body of ancient Greek or Latin writers or texts traditionally considered as the model for all literary endeavour. In later use usually in plural. With the. The canon of ancient Greek and Latin literature. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > the arts > literature > [noun] > specific types of literature > ancient Latin and Greek humanity1483 classic1684 humanistics1716 1684 T. Creech tr. Horace Satyrs i. x, in tr. Horace Odes, Satyrs, & Epist. (new ed.) 418 Is't thy Ambition mean unthinking Fool, To be a Classick thumb'd in every School [L. an tua demens vilibus in ludis dictari carmina malis?]? 1698 J. Strype Life Sir T. Smith (Dedication) He means Citations out of the Latin Poets and other Classics. 1734 J. Swift On reading Dr. Young's Satires in Epist. to Lady 18 If Clergymen, to shew their Wit, Prize Classicks more than Sacred Writ. 1748 Ld. Chesterfield Let. 22 Feb. (1932) (modernized text) III. 1106 Others, to shew their learning..are always talking of the Ancients, as something more than men... They are never without a Classic or two in their pockets. 1790 Aberdeen Mag. 14 Jan. 25/2 Those classics that are free from this censure, contain little else but the histories of murders. 1827 M. Bruen Let. 31 Mar. in Mems. Life & Char. Rev. Matthias Bruen 229 I almost fear now to plan to read a classic, or even to hunt up theological antiquities. 1862 R. G. Latham Elements Compar. Philol. 650 The only Roman which is known to us, i.e. the Latin of the classics. 1953 Sat. Rev. (U.S.) 15 Aug. 24/1 Lane..taught the classics not as drier-than-dust exercises in grammar and memory but as volumes very much alive. 1976 Daily Tel. 20 July 3/2 The defence council drew in Churchillian tones on the Bible, the classics, Shakespeare, even Conan Doyle. 2006 N.Y. Rev. Bks. 6 Apr. 44/3 Marlowe's encounter with the classics..must have included its share of mind-numbing tedium. b. A student of Greek and Latin literature, a classical scholar. Now rare. ΘΚΠ the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > branch of knowledge > humanistic studies > [noun] > classical scholarship > student or advocate of classic1805 classicist1867 1805 H. K. White Let. 18 Oct. in Remains (1807) I. 179 I find I am a respectable classic. 1823 C. Lamb in London Mag. May 534/2 A fine classic, and a youth of promise. 1895 J. M. Falkner Lost Stradivarius Epil. 260 He had always been an excellent scholar, and a classic of more than ordinary ability. 1907 E. M. Forster Longest Journey xvi. 190 He was not a good classic, but good enough to take the Lower Fifth. 1952 R. Macaulay Let. 2 May (1961) 309 So many brilliant classics can't do Maths, and vice versa. 3. a. With the. Classical style or thought; the classical ideal in art, literature, etc. Now rare. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > the arts > the arts in general > [noun] > specific movement or period cinquecento1762 classicality1784 romanticism1821 classicism1827 Renaissance1836 classicalism1840 Queen Anne1863 classic1864 renascence1868 classical1875 modernism1879 New Romanticism1885 Colonial Revival1887 shogun1889 super-realism1890 verism1892 neoclassicism1893 veritism1894 social realism1898 camerata1900 peasantism1903 proto-Renaissance1903 Biedermeier1905 expressionism1908 futurism1909 Georgianism1911 Dada1918 Dadaism1918 German expressionism1920 expressionismus1925 Negro Renaissance1925 super-realism1925 settecento1926 surrealism1927 Neue Sachlichkeit1929 Sachlichkeit1930 neo-Gothicism1932 socialist realism1933 modernismus1934 Harlem Renaissance1940 organicism1945 avant-gardism1950 nouvelle vague1959 bricolage1960 kitchen-sinkery1964 black art1965 neo-modernism1966 Yuan1969 conceptualism1970 sound art1972 pre-modernism1976 Afrofuturism1993 1864 J. H. Burton Scot Abroad I. v. 294 The transition between the classic and the Gothic. 1900 Jrnl. Soc. Arts 48 374/2 The ‘Adams’ is the most delicate and refined of all styles founded on the classic. 1921 K. Burke Let. 14 Jan. in Sel. Corr. K. Burke & M. Cowley (1988) 80 This is due, perhaps, to the conformism which is so essential a part of the classic. 1927 J. Buchan Witch Wood iv. 88 He..read again the passage where that father of the Church becomes a poet and strives to mingle the classic and the Christian. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > the arts > artist > [noun] > artist of specific movement or period mannerist1695 romanticist1821 trecentist1821 classicist1827 romantic1827 expressionist1850 classicalist1851 Gothicist1861 literalist1862 realist1868 modernist1879 verist1884 classic1885 symbolist1888 decadent1890 veritist1894 neoclassicist1899 neo-romantic1899 renaissancer1899 social realist1909 avant-garde1910 futurist1911 pasticheur1912 Bloomsbury1917 postmodern1917 pre-Romantic1918 Dadaist1919 German expressionist1920 super-realist1925 surrealist1925 New Romantic1930 brutalist1934 socialist-realist1935 avant-gardist1940 New Negro1953 neo-modernist1958 bricoleur1965 popster1965 sound artist1966 performance artist1975 1885 Athenæum 22 Aug. 229/2 In matters of form this poet is no romantic, but a classic to the finger-tips. 4. Also with capital initial. A traditional race, contest, or sporting tournament having special significance and honorific value; (British) any one of the five main flat races of the horse-racing season in Britain (see A. 6). Also attributive.The five main flat races of the horse-racing season in England are the One Thousand Guineas, Two Thousand Guineas, Derby, Oaks, and St Leger. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > sport > types of sport or game > racing or race > horse racing > [noun] > specific races St. Leger1778 the Oaks1779 Goodwood Cup1829 Leger1832 Cesarewitch1839 Cambridgeshire handicap1840 Grand Prix de Paris1862 Grand National1863 classic1899 national1909 1899 Belfast News-Letter 7 Sept. 2/7 The Danebury horseman..had previously won the last of the season's classics on a 50 to 1 chance. 1935 Times 29 July 3/6 The final of the fourth greyhound racing classic of the season, the Scurry Gold Cup. 1951 E. Rickman Come Racing with Me ii. 14 The five ‘classics’—the Two Thousand Guineas, One Thousand, Derby, Oaks and St. Leger. 1975 Albuquerque (New Mexico) Tribune 29 Dec. c2/2 The Cardinals defeated Texas A&M 102-88 in the Championship game of the Holiday Classic in Louisville. 2006 in Horse Racing's Top 100 Moments xix. 87 Jest also had produced a classic winner in Humorist, who won the 1921 English Derby. 5. The Classic period of Mesoamerican civilization. See sense A. 8. ΘΚΠ the world > people > ethnicities > Indian of Central or South America > [noun] > peoples of Central America > specific period Mixea1616 classic1947 1947 A. V. Kidder in A. V. Kidder et al. Excavations at Kaminaljuyu, Guatemala Introd. 5/1 Their [sc. Chavin, Early Chimu, etc.] efflorescence, like that of the Mesoamerican Classic, seems to have been followed by a more or less general retrogression. 1955 Amer. Anthropologist 57 775 In drawing the line between Formative and Classic on the north coast of Peru, it is our opinion that it should fall somewhere during the Gallinazo period. 1973 Times 26 July 18/4 A possibly typical domestic unit, abandoned presumably at the end of the Classic. 2005 R. E. W. Adams Prehistoric Mesoamerica v. 208 Control of land seems to have been nearly completely in the hands of the elite by the beginning of the Classic, and perhaps in the Late Formative in the Mirador regional state. 6. a. A classic garment (see sense A. 7a). ΘΚΠ the world > textiles and clothing > clothing > types or styles of clothing > [noun] > other > article of surplice1382 cento1610 fit1831 Tom and Jerry1832 breaster1841 princess cut1877 frump1886 trail1896 turn-down1896 peekaboo1908 see-through1937 zip-up1942 smart casual1943 classic1948 hipster1948 A-line1955 polo1967 tube1975 1948 M. Laski in New Statesman 13 Nov. 416/3 Classic, English garment (shoes, hat, suit) barely susceptible to fashion changes. 1960 Guardian 9 Dec. 8/4 Present-day teenage styles are already classics and have little or nothing to do with real fashion trends. 1994 Clothes Show Mag. May 15/4 Good-quality fashion classics made from natural fibres. b. = classic car at sense A. 7b. ΚΠ 1952 Pop. Mech. June 137/2 The greater beauty of a custom-built body always contributes to the value of a classic. 1972 Cincinnati Mag. Jan. 29/3 Most of the Herrmanns' work is done on classics, especially Rolls Royces. 1996 Adv. Driving Milestones Winter 15 Originally only especially innovative or high performance cars, such as Ferraris and Aston Martins, were considered true classics, but nowadays the term covers a very broad spread. 2008 Independent on Sunday 10 Feb. 24 Here you've got a genuine classic that's tax-free and is certain to have an automatic gearbox. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, November 2010; most recently modified version published online March 2022). < adj.n.1597 |
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