literary

listen to the pronunciation of literary
الإنجليزية - التركية
edebi

Onun biraz edebi yeteneği vardır. - She has some literary talent.

O büyük edebi yeteneği olan bir kadın. - She is a woman of great literary ability.

yazınsal
literarilyedebi olarak
edebiyatla ilgili
kitaba veya edebiyata ait
{s} konuşma dilinde kullanılmayan
literary and artistic works
fikir ve sanat eserleri
literary criticism
(Eğitim) edebiyat eleştirisi
literary language
(Dilbilim) yazın dili
literary movements
edebiyat akımları
literary theory
edebiyat kuramı
literary theory
yazın kuramı
literary argument
edebi tartışma
literary composition
edebi kompozisyon
literary criticism
edebi eleştiri
literary language
edebiyat dili
literary language
edebi dil
literary pirate
edebi korsanlık
literary study
edebi çalışma
literary genre
Edebi tür
literary movement
edebiyat akımı
literary review
edebi eleştiri
literary tradition
edebi gelenek
literary work
edebi çalışmalarına
literary composition
kitabet
literary discourse analysis
edebi söylev analizi
literary discourse analysis
edebi söyleşi analizi
literary executor
yazar öldükten sonra eserleriyle ilgilenen kimse
literary influence
edebi etki
literary man
edip
literary norms
yazınsal normlar
literary property
(Kanun) edebi mülkiyet
literary remains
yazarın ölümünden sonra basılan eserleri
literary style
edebi üslup
literary work
edebi eser
feminist literary criticism
feminizmin edebi eleştirisi
literarily
edebi olarak
steampunk (literary genre) noun, adjective
(Edebiyat) anakronik buhar dönemin kurgubilim (edebi tür) isim, sıfat

The spaceship captain's clothing came from the age of steam. The style was very 'steampunk'. Uzay gemisi kaptanın giysisi buhar döneminden geldi. Stili çok 'steampunk' idi. Please correct my Turkish.

supplementary literary material
ek edebi malzeme
literariness
(Sosyoloji, Toplumbilim) edebilik (rus biçimciliği)
literariness
(Sosyoloji, Toplumbilim) yazınsallık
literariness
edebi olma
الإنجليزية - الإنجليزية
Relating to literature
Knowledgeable of literature or writing
Bookish
Appropriate to literature rather than everyday writing
Relating to writers, or the profession of literature
{a} relating to letters or learning
of or relating to or characteristic of literature; "literary criticism"
Versed in, or acquainted with, literature; occupied with literature as a profession; connected with literature or with men of letters; as, a literary man
knowledgeable about literature; "a literary style"
Literary means concerned with or connected with the writing, study, or appreciation of literature. She's the literary editor of the `Sunday Review'. a literary masterpiece
{s} of or pertaining to books and writings, of literature; scholarly, educated, well-read; loving literature; pertaining to authorship
appropriate to literature rather than everyday speech or writing; "when trying to impress someone she spoke in an affected literary style" knowledgeable about literature; "a literary style" of or relating to or characteristic of literature; "literary criticism
of or relating to or characteristic of literature; "literary criticism
Literary words and expressions are often unusual in some way and are used to create a special effect in a piece of writing such as a poem, speech, or novel. adj. Arabic literary renaissance Chicago literary renaissance Irish literary renaissance literary criticism Times Literary Supplement Welsh literary renaissance International Convention for the Protection of Literary and Artistic Works
Of or pertaining to letters or literature; pertaining to learning or learned men; as, literary fame; a literary history; literary conversation
appropriate to literature rather than everyday speech or writing; "when trying to impress someone she spoke in an affected literary style"
Literary Chinese
The written Chinese|written Chinese]] language used from the end of the Han Dynasty|Han Dynasty]] (220 CE) to the early 20th century. In Chinese, 文言 (“literary writing”)
Literary Chinese
The written Chinese|written Chinese]] language used from the Zhou Dynasty|Zhou Dynasty]] (1045 BCE) (especially the Spring and Autumn Period|Spring and Autumn Period]]), through to the end of the Han Dynasty|Han Dynasty]] (220 CE). In Chinese, 古文 (“Ancient Writing”). The language of many classics of Chinese literature
Literary Chinese
Written Chinese for this entire period, without distinction
literary agent
A person who represents writers and their written works to publishers and film producers and assists in the sale and deal negotiation of the same
literary criticism
The study, discussion, evaluation, and interpretation of literature
literary device
An identifiable rule of thumb, convention, or structure that is employed in literature and storytelling
literary devices
plural form of literary device
literary journalism
Journalism with a more storylike twist than its factual counterpart
literary language
A register of a language that is used in literary writing
literary technique
Literary device
literary theory
The theory or the philosophy of the interpretation of literature and literary criticism
literary society
A literary society is a group of people interested in literature. In the modern sense, this refers to a society that wants to promote one genre of literature or a specific writer. Modern literary societies typically promote research about their chosen author or genre, publish newsletters, and hold meetings where research findings can be presented and discussed. Some are more academic and scholarly, while others are more social groups of amateurs who appreciate a chance to discuss their favourite writer with other hobbyists. Historically, literary society has also referred to salons such as those of Madame de Stael, Madame Geoffrin and Madame de Tencin in pre-Revolutionary France, and student groups at colleges and universities in the United States
literary Arabic
language used in Arabic literature
literary agent
an agent who represents an author is dealings with publishers
literary archives
historical collections of literature, literary records and documents
literary composition
imaginative or creative writing
literary critic
critic of literature
literary critic
a critic of literature
literary criticism
the informed analysis and evaluation of literature
literary criticism
written evaluation of the qualities and character of literary works; educated analysis and evaluation of literature
literary criticism
Literary criticism is the academic study of the techniques used in the creation of literature. Discipline concerned with philosophical, descriptive, and evaluative inquiries about literature, including what literature is, what it does, and what it is worth. The Western critical tradition began with Plato's Republic (4th century BC). A generation later, Aristotle, in his Poetics, developed a set of principles of composition that had a lasting influence. European criticism since the Renaissance has primarily focused on the moral worth of literature and the nature of its relationship to reality. At the end of the 16th century, Sir Philip Sidney argued that it is the special property of literature to offer an imagined world that is in some respects superior to the real one. A century later John Dryden proposed the less idealistic view that literature must primarily offer an accurate representation of the world for "the delight and instruction of mankind," an assumption that underlies the great critical works of Alexander Pope and Samuel Johnson. A departure from these ideas appeared in the criticism of the Romantic period, epitomized by William Wordsworth's assertion that the object of poetry is "truth...carried alive into the heart by passion." The later 19th century saw two divergent developments: an aesthetic theory of "art for art's sake," and the view (expressed by Matthew Arnold) that literature must assume the moral and philosophical functions previously filled by religion. The volume of literary criticism increased greatly in the 20th century, and its later years saw a radical reappraisal of traditional critical modes and the development of a multiplicity of critical factions (see deconstruction; poststructuralism; structuralism)
literary garbage
popular literature, "pulp fiction, " literature of a low standard
literary parallel
one literary piece which resembles another
literary review
educated critique of a book
literary review
a review devoted to literary criticism
literary salon
meeting place for scholars of literature, place of assembly for people involved in literature
literary study
the humanistic study of literature
literary supplement
literary addition, supplement in the matters of literature
literary work
written work (i.e. a book)
Arabic literary renaissance
(19th-century) Movement to develop a modern Arabic literature. Inspired by contacts with the West and a renewed interest in classical Arabic literature, it began in Egypt with Syrian and Lebanese writers who sought the freer environment there, and it spread to other Arab countries as a result of the dismemberment of the Ottoman Empire after World War I and the coming of independence after World War II. Its success in altering the direction of Arabic literature is related to the spread and modernization of education and the emergence of an Arabic press
Chicago literary renaissance
Flourishing of literary activity in Chicago 1912-25. Its leading writers Theodore Dreiser, Sherwood Anderson, Edgar Lee Masters, and Carl Sandburg realistically depicted the contemporary urban environment, condemning the loss of traditional rural values in the increasingly industrialized and materialistic American society. Associated with the period were the Little Theatre, an outlet for young playwrights; the Little Room, a literary group; and magazines such as The Dial, Poetry, and The Little Review. The renaissance also encompassed a revitalization of newspaper journalism as a literary medium
Irish literary renaissance
Flowering of Irish literary talent in the late 19th and early 20th century. It was closely allied with a strong political nationalism and a revival of interest in Ireland's Gaelic heritage (see Gaelic revival). Other factors in the renaissance were the retelling of ancient heroic legends in books such as Standish O'Grady's History of Ireland (1878, 1880) and Douglas Hyde's A Literary History of Ireland (1899), and the Gaelic League, formed in 1893 to revive the Irish language and culture. It developed into a vigorous literary force centred on William Butler Yeats; other important figures were Augusta Gregory, John Millington Synge, and Sean O'Casey. See also Abbey Theatre
Times Literary Supplement
the TLS a British weekly newspaper which contains articles and information about literature, especially about new books, produced by The Times. Weekly literary journal long famous for its coverage of all aspects of literature. Founded in 1902 as a supplement to The Sunday Times of London, the TLS sets the tone and standards of excellence in the field of literary criticism. It presents reviews of major books of fiction and nonfiction published in several languages, and its essays are written with sophistication and scholarly authority and in a lively style. It is also noted for its bibliographic thoroughness, for its topical essays by the world's leading scholars, and for the erudition of its readers' published letters to the editor. See also The Times
Welsh literary renaissance
Literary activity in Wales and England in the mid-18th century that attempted to stimulate interest in the Welsh language and in the classical bardic verse forms of Wales. It was centred on the Morris family of Welsh scholars, who preserved ancient texts and encouraged contemporary poets to use the strict metres of the ancient Welsh bards. The movement gave rise to many publications and helped reestablish local eisteddfods and, in the early 19th century, the National Eisteddfod. A second revival began with the establishment of the University of Wales at the end of the 19th century
literarily
in a literary manner, in regards to literature
literariness
The property of being literary, either being a work of literature or knowledgable of literature
literariness
{i} quality of being literary, quality of being well-versed in literature
the literary community
all writers and critics of literature, people of letters
literary
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