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epigram
[ ep-i-gram ]
noun
- any witty, ingenious, or pointed saying tersely expressed.
- epigrammatic expression:
Oscar Wilde had a genius for epigram.
- a short, often satirical poem dealing concisely with a single subject and usually ending with a witty or ingenious turn of thought.
epigram
/ ˈɛpɪˌɡræm /
noun
- a witty, often paradoxical remark, concisely expressed
- a short, pungent, and often satirical poem, esp one having a witty and ingenious ending
epigram
- Any pithy, witty saying or short poem. An aphorism can serve as an epigram, if it is brief.
Notes
Derived Forms
- ˌepigramˈmatically, adverb
- ˌepigramˈmatic, adjective
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of epigram1
Example Sentences
This whip-smart take on workplace racism and Black self-esteem signals its ambitions in an epigram attributed to Due: “Black history is black horror.”
Among Burke's epigrams are such copybook maxims as "The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing."
In this one, he basically stands around indulging a series of cosmic snit fits, laying waste to the digitally confected scenery and uttering tedious epigrams about time, recurrence and the apocalypse.
She fills the novel with epigrams, allusions and footnotes from actual texts and literature, ranging from "The Wealth of Nations" and "The Wretched of the Earth" to Wordsworth and nursery rhymes.
Among the manuscripts, personal notes and correspondence is the unfinished draft of the third book in the Parable series, “Parable of the Trickster,” which begins with an epigram that has been attributed to Butler herself.
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