Значение слова "ALLEGORY" найдено в 18 источниках

ALLEGORY

найдено в "Англо-русском большом универсальном переводческом словаре"
[`ælɪgərɪ]
аллегория; символ, эмблема


найдено в "Encyclopedia of medieval literature"
allegory: translation

   Allegory is typically defined as a descriptive or narrative literary text wherein the actions, the objects, and the characters signify ideas or concepts that lie outside the text itself. It might be seen as a kind of extended metaphor in which the literal narrative consistently parallels another level of meaning. In allegory, the writer’s main interest is the abstract level of meaning, and the most common technique is the personification of those abstractions. It is thus distinguished from symbolism, in which the writer’s main interest is the literal action of the story, and an object or person in the narrative suggests some meaning beyond the narrative.
   While C. S.Lewis’s comment in The Allegory of Love that medieval people naturally thought in allegorical terms may be an overstatement, it is certainly true that allegory was a favorite literary form of the European Middle Ages, beginning with PRUDENTIUS’s fourth-century poem PSYCHOMACHIA. A favorite allegorical genre was the DREAM VISION, wherein the narrator falls asleep and has an enigmatic dream replete with personified abstractions; examples of such dream visions are the French ROMAN DE LA ROSE, GOWER’s VOX ClAMANTIS, and CHAUCER’s PARLIAMENT OF FOWLS. Sustained allegory also became popular in the MORALITY PLAY genre of the late Middle Ages, with plays like EVERYMAN. Like many allegories, Everyman manifests a simple and unambiguous relationship between two clear levels of meaning. Other texts, notably LANGLAND’s PIERS PLOWMAN, consist of complex allegory on several levels. Allegory was an important tool in medieval biblical exegesis (or scriptural interpretation), in which the habit of reading the Old Testament to find foreshadowings of the New became commonplace, and began to be imitated by readers of literary texts and by writers composing those texts. Beginning in the fourth century, developed by John Cassian and promoted by St. AUGUSTINE, a fourfold method of scriptural analysis was developed consisting of a literal or historical level and three allegorical or “spiritual” levels: A typological level by which the Old Testament events prefigured those of the New Testament; a moral (or “tropological”) level in which the events of the narrative were applied to private individual spiritual lives; and the anagogical level, in which the narrative was related to the fate of the soul after death. Such readings influenced creative writers, most especially DANTE, who makes the point (in his famous Letter to Can Grande) that he expected his DIVINE COMEDY to be read and interpreted as the Scriptures were—on all four levels. Ultimately, the abil-ity to read allegorically is essential to reading medieval literature effectively.
   Bibliography
   ■ Brittan, Simon. Poetry, Symbol, and Allegory: Interpreting Metaphorical Language from Plato to the Present. Charlottesville: University of Virginia Press, 2003.
   ■ Hollander, Robert. Allegory in Dante’s Commedia. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1969.
   ■ Lewis, C. S. The Allegory of Love: A Study in Medieval Tradition. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1936.
   ■ Meyer, Ann R. Medieval Allegory and the Building of the New Jerusalem. Woodbridge, U.K.: D. S. Brewer, 2003.
   ■ Nugent, S. Georgia. Allegory and Poetics: The Structure and Imagery of Prudentius’Psychomachia.” Frankfurt am Main, Germany: P. Lang, 1985.


найдено в "Moby Thesaurus"
allegory: translation

Synonyms and related words:
Marchen, Western, Western story, Westerner, adventure story, allusion, analogy, apologue, arcane meaning, assumption, balancing, bedtime story, charactery, cipher, coloration, comparative anatomy, comparative degree, comparative grammar, comparative judgment, comparative linguistics, comparative literature, comparative method, compare, comparing, comparison, confrontation, confrontment, connotation, contrast, contrastiveness, conventional symbol, correlation, detective story, distinction, distinctiveness, emblem, fable, fabliau, fairy tale, fantasy, fiction, figuration, folk story, folktale, gest, ghost story, hint, horse opera, iconology, ideogram, implication, implied meaning, import, inference, innuendo, intimation, ironic suggestion, legend, likening, logogram, logotype, love knot, love story, matching, meaning, metaphor, metaphorical sense, mystery, mystery story, myth, mythology, mythos, nuance, nursery tale, occult meaning, opposing, opposition, overtone, parable, parallelism, pictogram, presumption, presupposition, proportion, relation, romance, science fiction, shocker, simile, similitude, space fiction, space opera, subsense, subsidiary sense, suggestion, supposition, suspense story, symbol, symbolic system, symbolism, symbolization, symbology, thriller, tinge, token, totem, totem pole, touch, trope of comparison, type, typification, undercurrent, undermeaning, undertone, weighing, whodunit, work of fiction


найдено в "Crosswordopener"

• Fable

• Figurative narrative

• I'm ___. Wanna hear a story?

• Lesson taught through symbolism

• Metaphoric tale

• Parable's kin

• Story with symbolism

• Symbolic representation

• Symbolic story

• Symbolic tale

• The art of symbolic representation

• The Divine Comedy, e.g.

• The Tortoise and the Hare, for one

• A short moral story (often with animal characters)

• A visible symbol representing an abstract idea

• An expressive style that uses fictional characters and events to describe some subject by suggestive resemblances

• An extended metaphor


найдено в "Easton's Bible Dictionary"
Allegory: translation

   Used only in Gal. 4:24, where the apostle refers to the history of Isaac the free-born, and Ishmael the slave-born, and makes use of it allegorically.
   Every parable is an allegory. Nathan (2 Sam. 12:1-4) addresses David in an allegorical narrative. In the eightieth Psalm there is a beautiful allegory: "Thou broughtest a vine out of Egypt," etc. In Eccl. 12:2-6, there is a striking allegorical description of old age.


найдено в "Новом большом англо-русском словаре"
[ʹælıg(ə)rı] n
аллегория; иносказание

apt [hidden] allegory - удачная [скрытая] аллегория

philosophical allegory - аллегория, имеющая философский смысл



найдено в "Новом большом англо-русском словаре под общим руководством акад. Ю.Д. Апресяна"


{ʹælıg(ə)rı} n

аллегория; иносказание

apt {hidden} ~ - удачная {скрытая} аллегория

philosophical ~ - аллегория, имеющая философский смысл



найдено в "Англо-русском словаре строительных терминов"
аллегория (скульптурное изображение на здании, носящее символический характер)

Англо-русский строительный словарь. — М.: Русский Язык..1995.


найдено в "Новом большом англо-русском словаре"
allegory
[ʹælıg(ə)rı] n
аллегория; иносказание
apt [hidden] ~ - удачная [скрытая] аллегория
philosophical ~ - аллегория, имеющая философский смысл



найдено в "Англо-русском словаре Мюллера"
allegory [ˊæləgǝrɪ] n
аллего́рия, иносказа́ние


найдено в "Англо-украинском словаре"


nалегорія; емблема


найдено в "Англо-русском словаре общей лексики"
сущ. 1) аллегория 2) символ, эмблема Syn: fable, parable
найдено в "Англо-русском словаре Лингвистика-98"
(n) аллегория; иносказание
найдено в "Англо-русском словаре редакции bed"
n. аллегория, иносказание
найдено в "Англо-українському словнику Балла М.І."
n алегорія, іносказання.
найдено в "Англо-русском дополнительном словаре"
аллегория; эмблема
найдено в "Англо-русском онлайн словаре"
аллегория
найдено в "Англо-українському словнику"
алегорія
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