dithyrambic
English
Adjective
dithyrambic (comparative more dithyrambic, superlative most dithyrambic)
- Of, pertaining to, or resembling a dithyramb; especially, passionate, intoxicated with enthusiasm.
- 1907, William James, Pragmatism:
- Signor Papini, the leader of italian pragmatism, grows fairly dithyrambic over the view that it opens, of man's divinely-creative functions.
- 1985, Paul Binding, Harmonica's Bridegroom , →ISBN, page 131:
- ... thighs appear to be continuously alighting and pausing in mid-air, detached from their dithyrambic owners, like luminous birds on the wing.
- 2000, Ian C. Johnston, The Birth of Tragedy by Friedrich Nietzsche, page 104:
- The dithyrambic chorus is a chorus of transformed people, for whom their social past, their civic position, is entirely forgotten.
- 2005, William Forbes Gray, Some Old Scots Judges: Anecdotes and Impressions , →ISBN, page 25:
- Nevertheless, if one has time and, still more, the patience to search whole acres of dithyrambic prose, he shall have his reward.
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