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Showing results for renaissance. Search instead for renaissancezeitlicher.
Definitions

renaissance

[ren-uh-sahns, -zahns, -sahns, ren-uh-sahns, -zahns, -sahns, ri-ney-suhns] / ˌrɛn əˈsɑns, -ˈzɑns, -ˈsɑ̃s, ˈrɛn əˌsɑns, -ˌzɑns, -ˌsɑ̃s, rɪˈneɪ səns /


Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

Morgan’s office, along with other Renaissance holdings, it’s hung rather high and subject to reflections, but with a little maneuvering on the viewer’s part, the intense, intimate image can be savored.

From The Wall Street Journal

Ms. Chan is a scholar of Renaissance arts and a former choral singer, and her book profits from her musician’s view of how music feels in the body and fires the senses.

From The Wall Street Journal

Lewis, meanwhile, sought to recover the ideas of love that animated medieval and Renaissance literature.

From The Wall Street Journal

The Holy Family is one of four roundels in the exhibition, a format that was particularly popular in Renaissance Florence.

From The Wall Street Journal

In 1972, filmmaker William Greaves reconvened a group of artists and luminaries from the Harlem Renaissance including musicians, playwrights, poets and scholars at Duke Ellington’s townhouse for an afternoon of reminiscing and rumination.

From Los Angeles Times