English to Spanish Dictionary muse

muse

musa
definition
verb
he was musing on the problems he faced
be absorbed in thought.
noun
In ancient Greek mythology, Muses were goddesses of science and art who inspired creative endeavors.
(in Greek and Roman mythology) each of nine goddesses, the daughters of Zeus and Mnemosyne, who preside over the arts and sciences.
It's not only his pet muse these days, but the very definition of his work.
an instance or period of reflection.
translation of 'muse'
verb
meditar,
reflexionar sobre
noun
musa
example
The poet's traditional invocation of the 'muse' calls her into being, to sing to him.
I call it quits for the day, having earned the rituals&em.the long bath, the shave, the afternoon 'muse' .
The artist's restless 'muse' and critical intellect enable a confrontation with, and the effort to amend, the society's limiting traditions.
It is difficult to make the transition from a 'muse' to an artist.
May Gaskell was the adored last 'muse' of the artist Edward Burne-Jones.
Switching gender roles may allow the 'muse' / artist relationship to flourish as women become more prominent in the arts and sciences.
My personal favorite was a four-foot tall statue of Terpsichore, the Greek 'muse' of dancing who bore the Sirens.
Almost 50 years after being immortalised by the poet Philip Larkin in a famous anthology, the 'muse' who inspired him is to speak on his legacy.
Loulou de la Falaise was the archetypal 'muse' , the inspiration for Yves Saint Laurent in the Seventies.
In the same way that I turned in my external 'muse' a few weeks ago, it's time for me to stop beating myself up over the way I broke his heart.
It's not only his pet 'muse' these days, but the very definition of his work.
Yeats' 'muse', Maud Gonne
This sonnet, however, is also a complex poem about the relationship between the poet, her 'muse' , and her reader.
She was, now in the eyes of people close to him, his 'muse' .
Here those with a literary calling gathered, together with those who required social stimulation to fire their 'muse' .
Yes, if it's about James Joyce and his 'muse' , the beautiful Nora Barnacle.
The figure and face of the woman have been the inspirational 'muse' for artists over the centuries.
Harriet Smithson may have been the 'muse' who inspired Berlioz's most celebrated symphony but she herself dies in obscurity and misery.
Opportunities do not wait for those who 'muse' and pause for deliberation.
According to Western tradition, poetry originates from the poet's passionate but necessarily unfulfilled longing for his 'muse' .
Her beauty inspires him and he takes her to be a 'muse' , a reason and an inspiration to choose a life of art and beauty rather than religious devotion.
Within that image he unified three unmanageable forces in his life - nature, the 'muse' , and his mother.
I was suffering without them, my artists, my 'muses' .
Activists left Bournemouth 'musing' that perhaps there was something rather satisfying in becoming, again in Harold Wilson's words, the ‘natural party of government’.
I've already entered the Half Marathon and am 'musing' over my options: I'm not fit enough to complete it comfortably but I reckon I could do it very uncomfortably.
‘Daisy's notion,’ Henry 'muses' , ‘that people can't live without stories, is simply not true.’
I was 'musing' about how it could be possible for kids so young to sing about love and loss when they truly have never had their heart broken.
She spent a fair bit of time in the tub, 'musing' and contemplating over her current situation and well-being.
As one character 'muses' toward the novel's end: ‘We always felt safe here.’
It would mean that women would have a central part in the culture, as 'muses' and inspirers certainly, but also as honourable beings in their own right.
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