bell notificationshomepageloginedit profileclubsdmBox

Search word meanings:

Word Meanings - ARISTARCH - Book Publishers vocabulary database

A severe critic. Knowles.

Related words: (words related to ARISTARCH)

  • CRITICISER
    One who criticises; a critic.
  • CRITICALLY
    1. In a critical manner; with nice discernment; accurately; exactly. Critically to discern good writers from bad. Dryden. 2. At a crisis; at a critical time; in a situation. place, or condition of decisive consequence; as, a fortification
  • CRITICASTER
    A contemptible or vicious critic. The rancorous and reptile crew of poeticules, who decompose into criticasters. Swinburne.
  • CRITIC
    1. One skilled in judging of the merits of literary or artistic works; a connoisseur; an adept; hence, one who examines literary or artistic works, etc., and passes judgment upon them; a reviewer. The opininon of the most skillful critics was,
  • CRITICALNESS
    1. The state or quality of being critical, or of occurring at a critical time. 2. Accuracy in examination or decision; exactness.
  • SEVERE
    perhaps akin to Gr. swikns innocent, chaste: cf. F. sévère. Cf. 1. Serious in feeeling or manner; sedate; grave; austere; not light, lively, or cheerful. Your looks alter, as your subject does, From kind to fierce, from wanton to severe. Waller.
  • CRITICISE
    1. To examine and judge as a critic; to pass literary or artistic judgment upon; as, to criticise an author; to criticise a picture. 2. To express one's views as to the merit or demerit of; esp., to animadvert upon; to find fault with;
  • CRITICISABLE
    Capable of being criticised.
  • CRITICAL
    Pertaining to, or indicating, a crisis, turning point, or specially important juncture; important as regards consequences; hence, of doubtful issue; attended with risk; dangerous; as, the critical stage of a fever; a critical situation.
  • CRITICISM
    1. The rules and principles which regulate the practice of the critic; the art of judging with knowledge and propriety of the beauties and faults of a literary performance, or of a production in the fine arts; as, dramatic criticism. The elements
  • HYPERCRITICALLY
    In a hypercritical manner.
  • ONIROCRITIC
    See ONEIROCRITIC
  • ACRITICAL
    Having no crisis; giving no indications of a crisis; as, acritical symptoms, an acritical abscess.
  • HYPERCRITICISM
    Excessive criticism, or unjust severity or rigor of criticism; zoilism.
  • ECCRITIC
    A remedy which promotes discharges, as an emetic, or a cathartic.
  • NEOCRITICISM
    The form of Neo-Kantianism developed by French idealists, following C. Renouvier. It rejects the noumena of Kant, restricting knowledge to phenomena as constituted by a priori categories.
  • ONEIROCRITICISM; ONEIROCRITICS
    The art of interpreting dreams.
  • DIACRITIC; DIACRITICAL
    That separates or distinguishes; -- applied to points or marks used to distinguish letters of similar form, or different sounds of the same letter, as, a, â, ä, o, ô, etc. "Diacritical points." Sir W. Jones. A glance at this typography
  • HYPOCRITIC
    See SWIFT
  • HYPERCRITICISE
    To criticise with unjust severity; to criticise captiously.
  • ONEIROCRITIC; ONEIROCRITICAL
    Of or pertaining to the interpretation of dreams. Addison.

 

Back to top