epigrams in English

noun
1
a pithy saying or remark expressing an idea in a clever and amusing way.
So, after weeks of intense preparation, I have come up with several epigrams so devastatingly clever in their sarcasm that my adversaries will be forced to admit defeat and submit to my will immediately.

Use "epigrams" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "epigrams" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "epigrams", or refer to the context using the word "epigrams" in the English Dictionary.

1. Bluettes et Boutades, 1846 (a book of epigrams)

2. Balsamon also wrote other juridical works, letters, and epigrams.

3. His ceaseless straining after brilliant epigrams quickly becomes irritating.

4. Alcaeus : EPIGRAMS Alcaeus of Messenewrote his epigrams in the years around 200 B.C., as is shown by several references to Philip V, the Macedonian king.

5. Begrimes begrime begrim begrimed begriming becrimes begrimmed becrime Begrimming epigrams

6. I'll give you Apothegms of hate and epigrams of ire.

7. One of Oscar Wilde's most frequently quoted epigrams is "I can resist everything except temptation".

8. Akin to these hortatory epigrams, in their tone of settled melancholy, are some of the satiric and Convivial.

9. Jobs urged in one of his trademark epigrams, and they raised a skull and crossbones over Bandley.

10. The surviving poems by Theocritus that are generally held to be authentic comprise Bucolics (pastoral poetry), mimes with either rural or urban settings, brief poems in epic or lyric metres, and epigrams

11. ‘And the loveable curmudgeon is responsible for most of literature's best quotations, maxims and Aphorisms.’ ‘It is a book of hard-won wisdom and stark pleasure in the form of 500 lyrical Aphorisms and epigrams.’ ‘Ethics was about obligations to other people, expressed in Aphorisms such as ‘do as you would be done by’.’

12. Anthology (n.) 1630s, "collection of poetry," from Latin anthologia, from Greek anthologia "collection of small poems and epigrams by several authors," literally "flower-gathering," from anthos "a flower" (see anther) + logia "collection, collecting," from legein "gather," from PIE root *leg-(1) "to collect, gather," with derivatives meaning "to speak (to 'pick out words')."