symbolist

English

Etymology

From French symboliste, coined by poet Paul Verlaine in 1885.

Adjective

symbolist (not comparable)

  1. (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.

Noun

symbolist (plural symbolists)

  1. One who employs symbols.

Translations

See also

See also

Swedish

Etymology

Borrowed from French symboliste.

Noun

symbolist c

  1. (art, literature) symbolist (adherent of the Symbolist movement)

Declension

Declension of symbolist
nominative genitive
singular indefinite symbolist symbolists
definite symbolisten symbolistens
plural indefinite symbolister symbolisters
definite symbolisterna symbolisternas

Further reading