clásico-2
classic ; classical ; vintage ; conventional ; classicising [classicizing, -USA] ; classicised [classicized, -USA] ; vintage.
The classic and well-known example of such a distinction is that which is frequently found in libraries where books are arranged in separate sequences according to their size; for example, octavo, quarto and folio.
Music, especially classical works, often requires the establishment of a uniform title.
Indeed, advantage was taken of the tenth anniversary of British membership to make 1983 a vintage year for monographs on the European Communities.
The foregoing discussion concerning analytical entries assumes implicitly a conventional catalogue format, that is, card, microform or other printed catalogue.
By modelling her portraits on ancient Roman busts, she was responding to cultural and political forces which fostered a classicizing style.
His Cubist still lifes with figures rendered in a sketchily classicized style echoes the conflict between the academic and the avant-garde in the early 20th century.
When she discovered vintage comics and their lurid covers, she went nuts.
a imitación de lo clásico
classicising [classicizing, -USA]
classicised [classicized, -USA]
By modelling her portraits on ancient Roman busts, she was responding to cultural and political forces which fostered a classicizing style.
His Cubist still lifes with figures rendered in a sketchily classicized style echoes the conflict between the academic and the avant-garde in the early 20th century.
arquitectura clásica
classical architecture
Symbols of permanence and value, as in banknotes for example, have always borrowed from the vocabulary of classical architecture.
ejemplo clásico
classical example
This is a classic example of hastily drafted and ill-conceived legislation.
época clásica, la
classical age, the
The classical age of Greece ran from the Persian Wars to Phillip of Macedon and Alexander the Great.
estudio clásico
classic study
This is a classic study, important because, for the first time, procedures were established and conclusions drawn about obsolescence rates for general classes of books.
estudios de literatura clásica
classical studies
Though the essays cluster separately about the themes of religion, science, and classical studies, the author adopts a broadly interdisciplinary approach, leaving the boundaries between topics appealingly open.
imitando a lo clásico
classicising [classicizing, -USA]
classicised [classicized, -USA]
By modelling her portraits on ancient Roman busts, she was responding to cultural and political forces which fostered a classicizing style.
His Cubist still lifes with figures rendered in a sketchily classicized style echoes the conflict between the academic and the avant-garde in the early 20th century.
latín clásico
Classical Latin
Between Classical Latin and the Romance languages came Vulgar Latin, the Latin that was spoken and changed faster than the literary language.
literatura clásica
classical literature
Younger students tended to have a greater proportion of books on teaching methodology, while older colleagues bought more classical literature.
mundo clásico, el
classical world, the
Greek and Latin may long since have lost their central place in Western education, but the influence of the classical world on our own culture remains very strong.
neoclásico
neoclassical [neo-classical]
Information as a commodity tends to be too complex to be articulated within neoclassical economic models.
obra anónima clásica
anonymous classic
Authorities for uniform titles were restricted to cover only uniform headings for anonymous classics.
texto clásico
classical text
Certain classes of books, indeed, were normally sold bound: school books, classical texts, bibles and prayer books, devotional handbooks and standard collections of sermons.