10 BÜCHER, DIE MIT «EUTRAPELY» IM ZUSAMMENHANG STEHEN
Entdecke den Gebrauch von
eutrapely in der folgenden bibliographischen Auswahl. Bücher, die mit
eutrapely im Zusammenhang stehen und kurze Auszüge derselben, um seinen Gebrauch in der Literatur kontextbezogen darzustellen.
"On the other hand, if eutrapely smells of a heliotrope: that's concrete, a problem
of the sort Mallarme and his age liked. Just look how we always end up referring
to Mallarme. But in this case it's appropriate. I would prefer to hear them, let's say
...
2
The Uses of Failure in Mexican Literature and Identity
If men did not pervert the order of things, gambling, far from being outlawed for
being wrong, would be so licit that it would fall under that moral virtue called
eutrapely. But since greed overcomes the limits of entertainment and since
people ruin ...
3
Wordcatcher: An Odyssey into the World of Weird and ...
The euphonious eutrapely was Aristotle's word for someone “pleasant in
conversation.” His teacher's teacher, Socrates, often invited to dinner a man
named Deipnoso, “a wise and witty conversationalist,” which gave us the word
deipnoso- ...
4
Laughter at the foot of the cross
33 Christian Laughter all but Nipped in the Bud: Eutrapely Condemned 'Neither
filthiness, nor foolish talking, nor jesting, which are not befitting.' St Paul was
instructing the church at Ephesus.1 Christians, it seems, may not, as the prophets
did, ...
Michael Andrew Screech, 1999
5
Totally Weird and Wonderful Words
From Greek eu- ('good') and stress. eutrapely [yoo-trap-uh-lee] a sadly obsolete
word for 'pleasantness in conversation,' one of the seven moral virtues
enumerated by Aristotle. In the New Testament, it was used to mean 'a
reprehensible levity ...
6
The Wordsworth Book of Urban Legend: Tall Tales for Our Times
And surely we all have a selection of pet words which we use to test dictionaries (
elychnious eutrapely), or specifics to look up in the indexes of books of whose
subject we have some knowledge? In the case of Roosevelt above, the aura of
the ...
7
The Gentleman's Magazine, and Historical Chronicle
The natural consequence of that, however, is, that such a man on coming back
from his literary hermitage into the world, cannot possibly have the affability, the
eutrapely, and the elegant manners of a polished Roman, who passes all his
days ...
8
The Gentleman's Magazine
The natural consequence of that, however, is, that such a man on coming hack
from his literary hermitage into the world, cannot possibly have the affability, the
eutrapely, and the elegant manners of a polished Roman, □who passes all his ...
Eutrapely, 1 j6. F. FJbianus, 214. Fabricius, 196, 198, Fancy, 190. Fausta and
Crijpus, 269. Fear and love, 173. Felicity, depends upon ourselves, 58. 1 Ferrand
, 1 79. Flatterers, 261. Flora, a Courtesan, X24. ! Furia, 94. G. GRace, the effects
of ...
Jacques Du Bosc, L. M., 1753
There are, after all, the negative as well as the positive aspects of this complex
reality.72 To conclude: Fr. Rahner puts in a learned word on behalf of the
forgotten virtue, eutrapely.73 There is something grim about the prospect of
people ...
William James McGarry, John Courtney Murray, 1956