SATIRES - meaning and definition. What is SATIRES
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What (who) is SATIRES - definition


Satires (Juvenal)         
  • Illustration by [[William Blake]] alluding to ''Satire XI'': ''e caelo descendit [[γνῶθι σεαντόν]]'' ("The maxim "Know thyself" comes down to us from the skies")
BOOK BY JUVENALIS
Vitam impendere vero; Satire III; Satire I; Satire II; Satire IV; Satire V; Satire VII; Satire VIII; Satire IX; Satire X; Satire XI; Satire XIII; Satire XIV; Satire XV; Satire XVI; Satires of juvenal; The Emperor's Fish; Satires of Juvenal
The Satires () are a collection of satirical poems by the Latin author Juvenal written between the end of the first and the early second centuries A.D.
Satires (disambiguation)         
WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
Satires are cultural texts in which vices, follies, abuses, and shortcomings are held up to ridicule.
Satires (Horace)         
WORK OF HORACE
Sermonum liber secundus; Sermonum liber primus; Iter Brundisium; Iter ad Brundisium
The Satires ( or Sermones) is a collection of satirical poems written by the Roman poet Horace. Composed in dactylic hexameters, the Satires explore the secrets of human happiness and literary perfection.
Examples of use of SATIRES
1. Many of his films were satires on Italian sexual habits.
2. That‘s what chat shows, satires, radio talk shows and comments sections are for.
3. So whatever pageantry might be confected for Mr Brown‘s holiday, it is safe to assume that satires, mockery and subversion will win the day.
4. One was the great ironist who etched the series of Caprichos, those corrosive little satires on Spanish authority, superstition and folly.
5. The drama "Celebration Meeting" scathingly satires and ridicules the enemy and discloses its reactionary nature and the inevitability of its ruin and the victory of the revolution.