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sentimentalised Meaning in Bengali







sentimentalised's Usage Examples:

novels" were particularly lucrative, which gave rise to a tendency to sentimentalised, picturesque, populist descriptions of Wessex – which, as a glance.


Gemma Kappala-Ramsamy, "Barbara Kingsolver: 'Motherhood is so sentimentalised in our culture'", The Guardian, 11 May 2013 (page visited on 2 April.


Vanbrugh's four-act fragment, A Journey to London, a play that had been sentimentalised by Colley Cibber in 1728 as The Provoked Husband.


The chanson réaliste sentimentalised the plight of poor and dispossessed women, such as prostitutes, waitresses.


the conventions of Augustan drama encouraged far less intense, more sentimentalised and decorous depictions of Ophelia's madness and sexuality.


Classical mythology alternating with the sentimentalised rustic realism of the school of Bastien-Lepage.


" Walter Kerr called it a "sentimentalised farce.


like-minded attitude towards its rigid social hierarchy: I grew up with a sentimentalised version of the English past, of the enshrined holiness of the squire.


However, he offers no sentimentalised image of the underclass, as servants exploited by their masters are.


In the 19th century, perhaps as childhood became sentimentalised, it becomes harder to tell the clothing apart between the sexes; the.


that Birket Foster produced the works for which he is best known—a sentimentalised view of the contemporary English countryside, particularly in the west.


The treatment of childhood by Tarrant and Webb is now regarded as sentimentalised, typical of its time.


setting, the genuine love embodied by Rosalind contrasted with the sentimentalised affectations of Orlando, and the improbable happenings that set the.


thus the 1775 edition, which called itself The New Roxana, had been sentimentalised to meet the tastes of the day.


his character of Beane as a "winsomely cranky" mentally unstable "sentimentalised lonely hero", noting how he magnetically, with "all blue eyes and twitching.


Writers of Yiddish literature variously satirised or sentimentalised Hasidic mysticism.


examines the ambiguous status of pet animals in Western society, at once sentimentalised and brutalised, or all too often abandoned.


suggested that the death of the hostage Kenneth Bigley was being over-sentimentalised by the people of Liverpool, accusing them of indulging in a "vicarious.


Pasamalar (1961) and Paarthaal Pasi Theerum (1962) as the three films "sentimentalised the family-based fraternal, filial and paternal love.


Still later, the form is sentimentalised; the features of the crucified are made to exhibit human suffering.



Synonyms:

misrepresent; belie; sentimentalize;

Antonyms:

fall short of; fail; underact; overact;

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