37 adjectives to describe classic

Singing lariat; a triple A western classic.

Familiar organ classics.

'I consider The Observer,' he arrogantly continues, 'as fairly enrolled amongst the standard classics of our native language.'

The remainder of the play, though amusing, is unfortunately not up to the level of the first act; else Wheels within Wheels would be a little classic of light comedy.

Bearing this in mind, it is the purpose of this book to gather together, in attractive form, such religious classics as are specially fitted to interest and uplift young people.

Singing lariat; a triple A western classic.

His History is consequently read more to-day as a literary classic than as an authority.

R645187. Doors into life: through five devotional classics.

For sixteen more years, during which he worked upon and produced immortal classics of biology, he was the most wretched and unhappy sufferer from neurasthenia.

Quintilian is a Latin classic, and belongs to the class of rhetoricians.

SCHROEDER AND GUNTHER, INC. SEE Miniature classics. SCHUBERT, FRANZ PETER. Impromptu; op.

He was a distinguished classic and an elegant scholar.

The broken statues and columns and traditions and fragmentary classics which Greece has left us are so still and tranquil to the eye and ear, that we search in vain for the Delphic wisdom they contain, till we find it echoed in the sympathetic depths of our souls, and repeated in the half-impalpable Ideals there.

Scott was too new for him; he had known the authorknown him, too, for a Tory; and to the genuine classic a contemporary is always something of a trouble.

His translation appeared in 1603, and may now be obtained complete in the handy "Temple" classics.

i. Cumberland (Memoirs, ii. 226) says that Mr. Dilly, speaking of 'the profusion of quotations which some writers affectedly make use of, observed that he knew a Presbyterian parson who, for eighteenpence, would furnish any pamphleteer with as many scraps of Greek and Latin as would pass him off for an accomplished classic.'

I quote from his letter to the author, which may not be out of place here: "No greater book will ever be written upon music, and it will one day be recognized as the imaginative classic of that divine art.

She was amazed to find there, instead of the accustomed orchestra, a pipe-organ that panted and throbbed and rumbled over lugubrious classics.

All the principal Latin classics, many of the Greek, and upward of two hundred fifty editions of the Bible, or parts of the Bible, had appeared.

Of the numerous freethinking books that appeared in England in the eighteenth century, this is the only one which is still a widely read classic.

It is not a pure style, but marks a transition period from the old popular Gothic and Saracenic forms to the revivified classic.

After its excursion into the fantastic jungle of Romanticism, the world has found it restful and restorative, to be sure, to return to the limited perfection of the serene and approved classics; yet perchance it is the last word of all philosophy that the astounding circumambient Universe is almost entirely unperceived by our senses and reasoning powers.

In a pale-blue, lace-fretted dress over a pale-blue slip, made in what her mother called "Empire style," Josie would deliver herself of "Entertaining Big Sister's Beau" and other sophisticated classics with an incredible ease and absence of embarrassment.

He was understood to be able to maintain a son a student in the theological classics of the University, at the gate of which the father was a mendicant.

One of the most delightful books in the world, one of the few universal classics, appears for the first time in our language in a translation worthy of its merits.

37 adjectives to describe  classic