romanticism
from
WordNet (r) 3.0 (2006)
romanticism
n 1: impractical romantic ideals and attitudes
2: a movement in literature and art during the late 18th and
early 19th centuries that celebrated nature rather than
civilization; "Romanticism valued imagination and emotion
over rationality" [syn: {Romanticism}, {Romantic Movement}]
[ant: {classicalism}, {classicism}]
3: an exciting and mysterious quality (as of a heroic time or
adventure) [syn: {romanticism}, {romance}]
from
The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48
Romanticism \Ro*man"ti*cism\, n. [CF. It. romanticismo, F.
romantisme, romanticisme.]
A fondness for romantic characteristics or peculiarities;
specifically, in modern literature, an aiming at romantic
effects; -- applied to the productions of a school of writers
who sought to revive certain medi?val forms and methods in
opposition to the so-called classical style.
[1913 Webster]
He [Lessing] may be said to have begun the revolt from
pseudo-classicism in poetry, and to have been thus
unconsciously the founder of romanticism. --Lowell.
[1913 Webster]
from
Moby Thesaurus II by Grady Ward, 1.0
64 Moby Thesaurus words for "romanticism":
affection, affectionateness, amativeness, amorousness, autism,
autistic thinking, bathos, bleeding heart, cloyingness,
demonstrativeness, dereism, dereistic thinking, dreamery, ecstasy,
enchantment, flight of fancy, goatishness, goo, hearts-and-flowers,
horniness, ideal, idealism, ideality, idealization,
imaginative exercise, impracticality, lovelornness, lovesickness,
maudlinness, mawkishness, mush, mushiness, namby-pamby,
namby-pambyism, namby-pambyness, nostalgia, nostomania,
oversentimentalism, oversentimentality, play of fancy, quixotism,
quixotry, rapture, romance, sentiment, sentimentalism,
sentimentality, sexiness, slop, sloppiness, slush, soap opera,
sob story, susceptibility, sweetness and light, tearjerker,
unpracticalness, unrealism, unreality, utopianism, visionariness,
wish fulfillment, wish-fulfillment fantasy, wishful thinking
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