| symbolism |
the use of one thing to represent another. Marvell's uses 'worms' in To His Coy Mistress (p.9) not ~::..' only to symbolise decay in death, but also to suggest the~:' male sexual organ. The' deep drums' in In Time of War (p.78) symbolise the ominous call to arms. See allegory. I
Ãâó: www.aberconwy.conwy.sch.uk/curriculum/english/y11/...
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| symbol |
The second element is the name of a character in the Symbol font. Eg [/symbol /symbolname. See the PostScript Reference Manual Symbol Encoding Vector, for further details.
Ãâó: www.ltg.ed.ac.uk/Pleuk/current/node157.html
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| symbolism |
using symbols and indirect suggestion to express ideas or emotion.
Ãâó: www.curriculumsupport.nsw.edu.au/litnumsite/Lie/gl...
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| symbol |
Something that on the surface is its literal self but which also has another meaning or even several meanings. For example, a sword may be a sword and also symbolize justice. A symbol may be said to embody an idea. There are two general types of symbols: universal symbols that embody universally recognizable meanings wherever used, such as light to symbolize knowledge, a skull to symbolize death, etc. ...
Ãâó: www.virtualsalt.com/litterms.htm
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| symbolism |
A nineteenth century art movement which focused on mysterious or ambiguous symbols of ideas rather than realism. Gauguin and van Gogh used Symbolism to produce emotional effects.
Ãâó: www.artorg.org/content/ArtTerms.htm
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