英:[seɪ'tɪrɪk]
美:[seɪ'tɪrɪk]
英:[seɪ'tɪrɪk]
美:[seɪ'tɪrɪk]
noun
often capitalized a sylvan deity in Greek mythology having certain characteristics of a horse or goat and fond of Dionysian revelry
a lecherous man
one having satyriasis
any of various satyrid butterflies
"关于半人半兽神话生物萨提尔或萨提尔的",大约1600年,源自拉丁语 satyricus,来自希腊语 satyrikos,特别是在希腊戏剧中所代表的,来自 satyros(参见 satyr)。相关词汇: Satyrical(1580年代)。
Middle English, from Latin satyrus, from Greek satyros
The first known use of satyr was in the 14th century
sauerbratennoun
beef soaked in vinegar and seasonings before being roasted
saucyadjective
marked by bold rudeness or disrespect : impudent a saucy answer
a saucy child
smart entry 2 sense 6a, trim
a saucy little hat
saucyadjective
marked by bold rudeness or disrespect : impudent a saucy answer
a saucy child
smart entry 2 sense 6a, trim
a saucy little hat
saucyadjective
marked by bold rudeness or disrespect : impudent a saucy answer
a saucy child
smart entry 2 sense 6a, trim
a saucy little hat
sauce1 of 2noun
a thick liquid that is eaten with or on food to add flavor ice cream with chocolate sauce
a tangy pasta sauce
boiled or canned fruit
cranberry sauce
rude or impolite language or actions
sauce2 of 2verb
to add sauce to : season
to be rude or impudent to
saucernoun
a small round shallow dish in which a cup is set
something like a saucer especially in shape
saucepannoun
a small cooking pan with a handle
sauce1 of 2noun
a thick liquid that is eaten with or on food to add flavor ice cream with chocolate sauce
a tangy pasta sauce
boiled or canned fruit
cranberry sauce
rude or impolite language or actions
sauce2 of 2verb
to add sauce to : season
to be rude or impudent to
satyrnoun
often capitalized a forest god believed by the ancient Greeks to have the ears and tail of a horse or goat and to enjoy rowdy pleasures
a man having strong sexual desire
satyrnoun
often capitalized a forest god believed by the ancient Greeks to have the ears and tail of a horse or goat and to enjoy rowdy pleasures
a man having strong sexual desire
1 In one particularly evocative small clay sculpture, two figures that may represent a satyr and a nymph are embracing.
2 The 'Alcestis' was entered by Euripides as a satyric play, but it only in parts approaches the characteristics of such a play.
3 The lines which have relation to Mr. More are so elegantly satyric, that it probably will not displease our readers to find them inserted here.
4 The competitor was obliged to send in three tragedies called a trilogy, together with what was called a satyric play.
5 The festival culminated in the production of tragedies, comedies and satyric dramas in the great theatre of Dionysus.
6 In the drama of Thespis we find the satyric drama confounded with tragedy, and the persons of the chorus frequently representing satyrs.
7 It cannot have been meant to be played, as a fourth piece, instead of a regular satyric drama.
8 But when he’s attacked by a winged fury disguised as his pre-algebra teacher (Megan Mullally), Percy discovers that those daydreams are very much rooted in reality, and he’s soon sucked into a magical world of minotaurs, satyrs, and destiny.
9 She catches how, in his satyric appearance — “hooded eyes, shirts unbuttoned to the navel” — Styron seemed to be “telegraphing his other, more private life.”
10 The satyric element seems, however, never to have become really popular, the fabula saltica as we know it dealing mainly with tragic or highly emotional themes.
11 According to the Vitruvius quote that forms the epigraph of Ms. Mantel’s novel, “There are three kinds of scenes, one called the tragic, second the comic, third the satyric.”
12 The satyric play was named from the satyrs or attendants upon Bacchus, and was a farce or burlesque intended to relieve the feelings of the spectators after the tragedies.
13 Now they all took shape satyric, like hideous heads thrust out of the dark to loll their tongues at him.
14 The Alcestis is altogether removed from the character, essentially grotesque, of a mere satyric drama.
15 The Cyclops, of uncertain date, is the only extant example of a satyric drama.
16 There stands the Palace Borea—a truly princely pile, built in the last Renaissance style of splendour, with sea-nymphs and dolphins, and satyric heads, half lips, half leafage, round about its doors and windows.
17 I know of no satire aimed at Spenser; a singular fate for a great poet: even “satyric Nash” revered the character of the author of “The Faery Queen.”
18 Critias, the well-known reactionary politician, the chief of the Thirty Tyrants, is placed amongst the atheists on the strength of a passage in a satyric drama, Sisyphus.
19 He was still grinning, but now the grin had become set, satyric, hideous.
20 STRANGER: And so our satyric drama has been played out; and the troop of Centaurs and Satyrs, however unwilling to leave the stage, have at last been separated from the political science.