Classical in spanish

Clásico

pronunciation: klɑsikoʊ part of speech: adjective
In gestures
clasico

classical = clásico. 

Example: Music, especially classical works, often requires the establishment of a uniform title.

more:

» classical age, the = época clásica, la.

Example: The classical age of Greece ran from the Persian Wars to Phillip of Macedon and Alexander the Great.

» classical architecture = arquitectura clásica.

Example: Symbols of permanence and value, as in banknotes for example, have always borrowed from the vocabulary of classical architecture.

» classical example = ejemplo clásico, ejemplo típico.

Example: This is a classic example of hastily drafted and ill-conceived legislation.

» Classical Latin = latín clásico.

Example: Between Classical Latin and the Romance languages came Vulgar Latin, the Latin that was spoken and changed faster than the literary language.

» classical literature = literatura clásica.

Example: Younger students tended to have a greater proportion of books on teaching methodology, while older colleagues bought more classical literature.

» classical studies = estudios de literatura clásica.

Example: Though the essays cluster separately about the themes of religion, science, and classical studies, the author adopts a broadly interdisciplinary approach, leaving the boundaries between topics appealingly open.

» classical text = texto clásico.

Example: Certain classes of books, indeed, were normally sold bound: school books, classical texts, bibles and prayer books, devotional handbooks and standard collections of sermons.

» classical work = obra clásica.

Example: Drawing from classical works, histories, and other literary sources, Shakespeare liberally adapted stories in creating his plays.

» classical world, the = mundo clásico, el.

Example: Greek and Latin may long since have lost their central place in Western education, but the influence of the classical world on our own culture remains very strong.

» neoclassical [neo-classical] = neoclásico.

Example: Information as a commodity tends to be too complex to be articulated within neoclassical economic models.

Classical synonyms

standard in spanish: estándar, pronunciation: stændɜrd adjective, nounclassic in spanish: clásico, pronunciation: klæsɪk adjective, noundefinitive in spanish: definitivo, pronunciation: dɪfɪnɪtɪv adjectiveauthoritative in spanish: autoritario, pronunciation: əθɔrəteɪtɪv adjectivehellenic in spanish: helénico, pronunciation: həlenɪk adjective, nounneoclassical in spanish: neoclásico, pronunciation: nioʊklæsɪkəl adjectiveneoclassic in spanish: neoclásico, pronunciation: nioʊklæsɪk adjectivegreco-roman in spanish: grecorromano, pronunciation: grekoʊroʊmən adjective
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