symbolist
English
Etymology
From French symboliste, coined by poet Paul Verlaine in 1885.
Adjective
symbolist (not comparable)
- (art, literature) Of or pertaining to the Symbolist movement in late 19th-century and early 20th-century European arts and literature
- 2007 April 15, Randy Kennedy, “When Picasso and Braque Went to the Movies”, in New York Times[1]:
- The general picture that has emerged is one of Cubism bubbling up out of a thick Parisian stew of symbolist poetry, Cézanne, cafe society, African masks, absinthe and a fascination with all things mechanical and modern, mostly airplanes and automatons.
Related terms
Noun
symbolist (plural symbolists)
- One who employs symbols.
Translations
someone employing symbols
|
See also
- Symbolism (arts) on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
See also
Swedish
Etymology
Borrowed from French symboliste.
Noun
symbolist c
- (art, literature) symbolist (adherent of the Symbolist movement)
Declension
| nominative | genitive | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| singular | indefinite | symbolist | symbolists |
| definite | symbolisten | symbolistens | |
| plural | indefinite | symbolister | symbolisters |
| definite | symbolisterna | symbolisternas |
Related terms
- symbolism
- symbolistisk