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Synge
[ sing ]
noun
- John Mil·ling·ton [mil, -ing-t, uh, n], 1871–1909, Irish dramatist.
- Richard Laurence Millington, 1914–96, English biochemist: Nobel Prize in chemistry 1952.
Synge
/ sɪŋ /
noun
- SyngeJohn Millington18711909MIrishWRITING: playwright John Millington. 1871–1909, Irish playwright. His plays, marked by vivid colloquial Irish speech, include Riders to the Sea (1904) and The Playboy of the Western World, produced amidst uproar at the Abbey Theatre, Dublin, in 1907
Example Sentences
His 2010 book, “Ghost Light,” chronicled the love affair between a young actress and the playwright John Millington Synge.
Synge’s play tells of a rural County Mayo community that lionizes an outsider named Christy Mahon, the eponymous “playboy,” after he brags about murdering his father.
The roots of the violent proclivities in Martin McDonagh’s scathing contemporary comedies can be traced to Synge’s work.
Synge, and were produced in collaboration with Poetry Ireland in Dublin, Druid Theater in Galway, the 92nd Street Y in New York and Poet in the City in London.
The project grew out of another cancellation, a big production for Solas Nua: a revival of John Millington Synge’s “The Playboy of the Western World,” in which Moody was supposed to play the lead.
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