romance
Kelime Anlamı :

1. macera.
2. aşk hikâyesi.
3. aşk romanı.
4. martaval.
5. abartmak.
6. latin.
7. latince kökenli.
8. aşk hikâyesi anlatmak.
9. çekicilik.
10. büyü.
Sahne Örnekleri :
Eş Anlamlı Kelimeler :
Tanımlar :
1. A love affair.
2. ardent emotional attachment or involvement between people; love: they kept the romance alive in their marriage for 35 years.
3. A strong, sometimes short-lived attachment, fascination, or enthusiasm for something: a childhood romance with the sea.
4. A mysterious or fascinating quality or appeal, as of something adventurous, heroic, or strangely beautiful: "these fine old guns often have a romance clinging to them” ( Richard Jeffries).
5. A long medieval narrative in prose or verse that tells of the adventures and heroic exploits of chivalric heroes: an Arthurian romance.
6. A long fictitious tale of heroes and extraordinary or mysterious events, usually set in a distant time or place.
7. the class of literature constituted by such tales.
8. an artistic work, such as a novel, story, or film, that deals with sexual love, especially in an idealized form.
9. the class or style of such works.
10. A fictitiously embellished account or explanation: we have been given speculation and romance instead of the facts.
11. music A lyrical, tender, usually sentimental song or short instrumental piece.
12. the romance languages.
13. of, relating to, or being any of the languages that developed from latin, including italian, french, portuguese, romanian, and spanish.
14. to invent, write, or tell romances.
15. to think or behave in a romantic manner.
16. informal to make love to; court or woo.
17. informal to have a love affair with.
from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 4th Edition
1. originally, a tale in verse, written in one of the romance dialects, as early french or provencal; hence, any popular epic belonging to the literature of modern europe, or any fictitious story of heroic, marvelous, or supernatural incidents derived from history or legend, and told in prose or verse and at considerable length: as, the romance of Charlemagne; the Arthurian romances.
2. in spain and other romanic countrieseither a short epic narrative poem (historic ballad), or, later
3. a short lyric poem.
4. A tale or novel dealing not so much with real or familiar life as with extraordinary and often extravagant adventures, as Cervantes's “don quixote,” with rapid and violent changes of scene and fortune, as dumas's “count of monte Cristo,” with mysterious and supernatural events, as R. L. stevenson's “strange case of dr. Jekyll and mr. hyde,” or with morbid idiosyncrasies of temperament, as Godwin's “Caleb Williams,” or picturing imaginary conditions of society influenced by imaginary characters, as Fouqué's “undine.”
5. special forms of the romance, suggested by the subject and the manner of treatment, are the historical, the pastoral, the philosophical, the psychological, the allegorical, etc. see novel, n., 4.
6. others were much scandalized. it [“the pilgrim's progress”] was a vain story, a mere romance, about giants, and lions, and goblins, and warriors.
7. an invention; fiction; falsehood: used euphemistically.
8. A blending of the heroic, the marvelous, the mysterious, and the imaginative in actions, manners, ideas, language, or literature; tendency of mind to dwell upon or give expression to the heroic, the marvelous, the mysterious, or the imaginative.
9. in music: A setting of a romantic story or tale; a ballad.
10. any short, simple melody of tender character, whether vocal or instrumental; a song, or song without words. also romanza.
11. [capitalized] A romance language, or the romance languages. see II.
12.
13. pertaining to or denoting the languages which arose, in the south and west of europe, out of the roman or latin language as spoken in the provinces at one time subject to rome.
14. to invent and relate fictitious stories; deal in extravagant, fanciful, or false recitals; lie.
15. to be romantic; behave romantically or with fanciful or extravagant enthusiasm; build castles in the air.
16. to treat, present, or discuss in a romantic manner.
from The Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia