lyric

গীতধর্মী
definition
noun
And each string was a different poem, a different lyric organized around a distinct, intense emotion.
a lyric poem or verse.
she has published both music and lyrics for a number of songs
the words of a song.
adjective
Thus, in a number of discussions, I may have shown a little too much brain to one of my tennis partners, a writer of lyric poetry.
(of poetry) expressing the writer's emotions, usually briefly and in stanzas or recognized forms.
a lyric soprano with a light, clear timber
(of a singing voice) using a light register.
translation of 'lyric'
গীতিধর্মী,
ব্যক্তিগত আবেগ-অনুভূতিমণ্ডিত
noun
গীতিকবিতা,
গান,
পদ
adjective
গীতধর্মী
example
Bogan suffered its loss profoundly, while attempting to understand it as the pattern of the 'lyric' poet's life.
Well, what less would you expect of a man who studied English literature to u2018understand 'lyric' betteru2019?
The Greek writers of 'lyric' poetry are separated from the Latin poets he considers his own.
At the same time, it discusses the nature of the 'lyric' .
I think and sleep with the idea for a long time before it takes the shape of a poem or 'lyric' .
It was very unusual - I was the first - for a 'lyric' tenor to sing all those notes in full voice.
DAVID CAMPBELL was first and foremost a 'lyric' poet.
Although the tenor blew out his lovely 'lyric' voice years ago, long before his bout with and recovery from leukemia, that doesn't seem to bother his fans.
They are also already more interesting than they usually are, for construing 'lyric' as a sort of thought about matter advances poetics in many ways.
Abbuehl's singing relies on texture for expression rather than melodic embellishment; she obviously delights in the poetry of the 'lyric' , hence her interest in cummings and Robert Creeley.
His verse is both metrically and formally experimental, ranging from satire to love 'lyric' , from sonnet to verse epistle, from elegy to hymn.
This coincidence naturally included Traherne in Modernist studies of 'lyric' poetry.
As a refusal to abstract, the 'lyric' voice is crucial to democracy and crucial to life.
Famed in his day as patriot, satirist, and foe to tyranny, Marvell was virtually unknown as a 'lyric' poet.
Conditions for the survival of the 'lyric' would seem as favorable now as they ever were.
All these elements belong within the framework of the 'lyric' , rather than dramatic, tradition.
My own work on poetry has focused on the Western European tradition of 'lyric' .
However, the principals' 'lyric' voices are not, on the face of it, weighty enough for the roles of Leonora and Manrico.
Some people think the hexameter line comes from the 'lyric' , from rhythmic phrases put together, usually three phrases in a line.
At which point the traditional antinomies of 'lyric' and epic may be invoked only as skirmishers in the move from the discrete poem to the interconnected book.
And I think there is no other 'lyric' poet who even approaches Robert Burns but study of him seems very rare in English literature courses as far as I am aware.
The role of Offred herself is double cast, with a mezzo-soprano singing the Offred of the Republic and a 'lyric' soprano singing the role of Offred in the time before.
In the 'lyric' that follows, the speaker imagines himself as a being contented to be a guest and a stranger, committed to coexistence with other guests and strangers.
To pursue the idea that the interest of 'lyric' is linked with a certain performative voicing, let me move from a poete maudit to a priestly poet.
Granted, the poets had the advantage of including among their number Matt Miller, an aspiring writer of 'lyric' verse who happened to have been a defensive starter at Yale five years ago.
Thus, in a number of discussions, I may have shown a little too much brain to one of my tennis partners, a writer of 'lyric' poetry.
In the context of elegy and of 'lyric' , however, this marks a distinct departure, and one that acquires weight as print becomes a commodity consumed by unknown readers.
Or to put it another way, I want to borrow from the concrete world and project it into the realm of the abstract, where the 'lyric' exists.
Setting poems by John Keats and William Wordsworth, Braithwaite developed a love of 'lyric' poetry that inspired his own writing.
For Welish, the seasoned experimentalist, a central question which has never lost its urgency hinges upon what the 'lyric' can comprehend, what it can grasp in its shifting abode.
Credits: Google Translate