释义 |
panegyricpan‧e‧gyr‧ic /ˌpænəˈdʒɪrɪk/ noun [countable]  panegyricOrigin: 1600-1700 Latin panegyricus, from Greek, from panegyris ‘public meeting for celebration’ - Directly hooked on to this, often expressed in the same sentence, was a long and, hard-dying panegyric for the past.
- In addition, Fortunatus's panegyrics are a revival, if not a continuation, of the form in which Sidonius had excelled.
old-fashioned formal a speech or piece of writing that praises someone or something a lot |