lear in English

noun
1
a legendary early king of Britain, the central figure in Shakespeare's tragedy King Lear . He is mentioned by the chronicler Geoffrey of Monmouth.

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

1. 5 'King Lear' still holds audiences spellbound .

2. 16 What Lear revered in Gould - his remarkable business sense and financial efficiency - Gould probably found exasperatingly lacking in Lear.

3. • Lear was Captivated by the extraordinary and extrovert family of parrots

4. C 1603–1606: Shakespeare, King Lear, IV-i Poor Tom's Acold

5. The Low Energy Antiproton Ring (LEAR) decelerated and stored Antiprotons for experiments

6. Home Bookplates Page 1 of 1 Filter by: Sort by: Edward Lear Bookplates

7. Students will be introduced to direct and indirect Characterization, as well as lear

8. Speech Blubs is a voice-controlled speech therapy app designed to help your child lear

9. Once Lear had given the land to his daughters, the power that they have Corrupts them

10. But who comes here?Enter KING LEAR, fantastically dressed with wild flowersThe safer sense will ne'er Accommodatehis master thus

11. In 2015 Gordon was honored by the Producers Guild of America with the Norman Lear Award for achievement in television.

12. The funeral that Lear provided for Foss, which included an epigraphed headstone, is said to have been more elaborate than Lear's own.

13. Under Zimbler's direction, The Re-Theatre Instrument has re-imagined such classic works as Faust, King Lear and Much Ado About Nothing.

14. 1605, William Shakespeare, King Lear, Act II, Scene 2, [1] [ …] Such smiling rogues as these, Like rats, oft bite the holy cords Atwain

15. If you are a golfer looking to improve Chipping, using this one secret move to improve Chipping will help you lower scores and help your golf short game!Lear

16. He goes on to recount a recent falling out: “she tackled me savagely for being a canary-bird; I replied (Bleatingly) protesting that there was no use in turning life into King Lear

17. IPA: /əˈrɔɪnt/ Verb aroint (third-person singular simple present aroints, present participle Arointing, simple past and past participle arointed) (archaic) to dispel, to drive away• 1605: And aroint thee, witch, aroint thee! — William Shakespeare, King Lear III.iv

18. The scansion of the Limerick written by Edward Lear (1812 –1888) in quantitative meter is shown where the Amphibrach foot in the poem with trimeter (3) and dimeter (2) verses in a rhyme scheme aabbA is used

19. (archaic) to dispel, to drive away 1605, William Shakespeare, King Lear, III.iv And aroint thee, witch, aroint thee! 1844, Elizabeth Barrett Browning, To Flush, My Dog Whiskered cats Arointed flee, Sturdy stoppers keep from thee Cologne distillations

20. Raphael Holinshed, English Chronicler, remembered chiefly because his Chronicles enjoyed great popularity and became a quarry for many Elizabethan dramatists, especially Shakespeare, who found, in the second edition, material for Macbeth, King Lear, Cymbeline, and many of his historical plays.

21. Anapests in Lear's "There was an Old Man with a Beard" The poet Edward Lear is famous for his limericks —short, humorous poems consisting of four lines that make use of Anapests to create a lighthearted, comedic effect

22. Some of Lear's pre-1872 drawings depict a cat very similar to Foss with a stumpy tail, tabby markings, and a portly appearance, and it is possible that Lear, knowingly or otherwise, conflated his imagined cat with the real Foss.

23. Bedlam: The Series is an inventive and irreverent Shakespeare mashup that twists together characters and plots from King Lear, The Merry Wives of Windsor, The Merchant of Venice and other plays into a new story that will unfold over 8 episodes, using shakespeare’s own language.

24. 21 We’Il never ken the worth of water till the well gae dry 70 We are aye to lear as lang as we live We can poind for debt but no for unkindnefs We can fhape their wylie coat but no their weird We’ll never big (illegible text) Bonnocks

25. Bawds, BABES, AND BREECHES Regendering Theater after the English Restoration Implications for Perceptions and Treatments of Gender in English Society by LAURA LARSON History 400, Professor John Lear University of Puget Sound Tacoma, Washington December 13, 2012 ABSTRACT Restoration England (1660~1720) was a raucous time for theater-making.

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27. Aroint (third-person singular simple present aroints, present participle Arointing, simple past and past participle arointed) to dispel, to drive away 1605, William Shakespeare, King Lear, III.iv And aroint thee, witch, aroint thee! 1844, Elizabeth Barrett Browning, To Flush, My Dog Whiskered cats arointed flee, Sturdy stoppers keep from thee

28. (this is an essay called ‘An Atheist looks at The Anathemata ’ which presents a short version of my interpretation of the poem) begin reading at the cover page of The Anathemata go straight to the introduction to a particular Section Rite and Fore-time Middle-sea and Lear-sea Angle-land Redriff The Lady of the Pool Keel, Ram, Stauros

29. Bastardy is not a major theme in King Lear, but it can be hugely informative to see what happens to Bastardy once Shakespeare drags it into the world of the play, and that’s how stigma often works: decent people in power (in this case, Shakespeare) unintentionally producing and perpetuating regrettable social dynamics, not because those people are wicked or stupid, but because they focus their attention …