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ٰDzٱ-üǴڴ

[ draws-tuh-hyls-hawf ]

noun

  1. An·net·te E·li·sa·beth Frei·in von [ah-, net, -, uh, ey-, lee, -zah-bet , frahy, -in f, uh, n], 1797–1848, German poet.


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Example Sentences

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Therese Dahn, born Freiin von ٰDzٱ-üǴڴ, was born in 1845, and married Felix Dahn in 1873.

From

Whoever shut the door on the influences spoken of, as did Franz Grillparzer or Hebbel, and, in a different way, Annette von ٰDzٱ-üǴڴ or Heinrich Leuthold, at the same time nullified a good part of his efficiency.

From

All the efforts and all the attempts on the part of both Catholics and Protestants have not succeeded in producing religious poems of any degree of importance since Annette von ٰDzٱ-üǴڴ ceased to sing; whereas, on the other hand, poetry that is hostile to the church has brought to maturity some great productions, not only in Anzengruber or Karl Schoenherr, in Friedrich Theodor Vischer, in Storm, and Keller, but, above all, in Nietzsche.

From

But this lack of a fixed specific style spread likewise to other forms of composition; Schiller's drama became too rhetorical; Friedrich Rückert's lyric poetry too prosaically didactic; that of Annette von ٰDzٱ-üǴڴ often too obscure and sketchy.

From

In many old-style poets of modern times, in Hölderlin, in Kleist, Grillparzer, and Annette von ٰDzٱ-üǴڴ this fear assumes the character of ethical aversion to baring their feelings in public.

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