allusive
English
Etymology
From Latin allūs-, past participle stem of allūdere (“to joke, jest”; see allude) + -ive.[1]
Pronunciation
Adjective
allusive (comparative more allusive, superlative most allusive)
- that contains or makes use of allusions (indirect references or hints)
- 1984, John Bayley, Two pieces on translating Mandelstam: Selected Essays, page 149:
- English poetry is compelled by the stubbornness of the language continually to renounce the too obviously poetic: but in seeking to be more precise, more dense and more allusive, Russian poetry has never had to give up the straightforward traditional intoxications of sound and rhyme.
- 2010, James Matthews, Late Modernism and the Marketplace, Edwina Keown, Carol Taaffe (editors), Irish Modernism, page 172,
- The footnotes ensure that the lines become more allusive and more polysemantic, vacillating between transubstantiation and ghostly intimations.
- 2013, Nick Nicholas, George Baloglou (translators and editors), Introduction, Unknown author, An Entertaining Tale of Quadrupeds, [14th c, Παιδιόφραστος διήγησις τῶν ζῴων τῶν τετραπόδων], page 87,
- The Book is a more allusive work than the Tale, which leads to speculation on whether the digressions in both works might not merely be a case of a rambling narrator.
- Synonym: suggestive
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Derived terms
Translations
containing or making use of allusions
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References
- Douglas Harper (2001–2023), “allusive”, in Online Etymology Dictionary.
Anagrams
French
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /a.ly.ziv/
Audio (CAN) (file) - Homophone: allusives
Italian
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