DANDIES - translation to arabic
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DANDIES - translation to arabic

MAN WHO PLACES PARTICULAR IMPORTANCE UPON PHYSICAL APPEARANCE
Dandyism; Dandies; Dandy (fashion); Dandy (Fashion); Dandy men; Quaintrelle; Dandiacal
  • '''The British Dandy:''' Beau Brummell in a double-breasted sportscoat and odd trousers, in 1805. ([[Richard Dighton]]).
  • '''Parisian costumes:''' The dandies of Paris in 1831.
  • An 1819 caricature of a Dandizette
  • '''The French Dandy:''' The symbolist poet [[Robert de Montesquiou]].  ([[Giovanni Boldini]]).
  • '''The Dandy King:''' [[Joachim Murat]], the French [[King of Naples]].
  • Pelham: Or, The Adventures of a Gentleman]]'' (1828), by  [[Edward Bulwer-Lytton]].<br><br> The illustration, by [[E. J. Sullivan]], is from an 1898 edition of the novel ''Sartor Resartus'' (1831), by Thomas Carlyle.

DANDIES         

الصفة

غُنْدُور ; مؤنق ; مُتَأَنِّق ; مُهَنْدَم

dandy         
اسْم : الغَنْدُور وهو شخص شديد التأنّق في مَلْبَسه أو مَظْهَرِه . شيء ممتاز
dandy         
N
رجل شديد التأنق جـ رجال ، عندور جـ غنادرة
ADJ
ممتاز ، من الطراز الأول

Definition

Dandies

Wikipedia

Dandy

A dandy is a man who places particular importance upon physical appearance and personal grooming, refined language and leisurely hobbies; every activity pursued with apparent nonchalance. A dandy could be a self-made man in person and persona, who imitated an aristocratic style of life, despite his middle-class origin, birth, and background, especially in the Britain of the late-18th and early-19th centuries.

Early manifestations of dandyism were Le petit-maître (the Little Master) and the musky Muscadin ruffians of the middle-class Thermidorean reaction (1794–1795), but modern dandyism appeared in the stratified societies of Europe during the revolutionary period of the 1790s, especially in cultural centres such as London and in Paris. Socially, the dandy cultivated a persona of extreme cynical reserve to the degree that the Victorian novelist George Meredith defined such posed cynicism as "intellectual dandyism"; whereas the kinder Thomas Carlyle, in the novel Sartor Resartus (1831), dismissed the dandy as just "a clothes-wearing man"; and Honoré de Balzac in La fille aux yeux d'or (1835) chronicled the idle life of Henri de Marsay, a model French dandy done in by his obsessive Romanticism in pursuit of love, which included yielding to sexual passion and murderous jealousy.

In the metaphysical phase of dandyism, the poet Charles Baudelaire defined the dandy as a man who elevates æsthetics to a religion. That the dandy is an existential reproach of the conformity of the middle-class man, because "dandyism, in certain respects, comes close to spirituality and to stoicism" as an approach to living daily life. That "these beings, have no other status, but that of cultivating the idea of beauty in their own persons, of satisfying their passions, of feeling and thinking . . . [because] Dandyism is a form of Romanticism. Contrary to what many thoughtless people seem to believe, dandyism is not even an excessive delight in clothes and material elegance. For the perfect dandy, these [material] things are no more than the symbol of the aristocratic superiority of mind."

The linkage of clothing and political protest was a particularly English national characteristic in 18th-century Britain; the sociologic connotation is that dandyism was a reactionary protest against social equality, against the levelling effect of egalitarian principles, thus the dandy is nostalgic for feudal values and the ideals of the perfect gentleman and the autonomous aristocrat — men of self-made person and persona. Paradoxically, the social existence of the dandy required the gaze of spectators, an audience, and readers for their "successfully marketed lives" in the public sphere, as in the cases of the playwright Oscar Wilde and the poet Lord Byron, each of whom personified the two social roles of the dandy: (i) the dandy-as-writer, and (ii) the dandy-as-persona; each role a source of gossip and scandal, each man limited to entertaining high society.

Examples of use of DANDIES
1. Hitherto, one always associated this lackadaisical condition with upper–class dilettantes – Wildean dandies – but it seems the modern Labour party also suffers.
2. He is famous for his depictions of decadent Berlin, including his phantasmagoric painting "Metropolis" with its dandies, prostitutes and thugs rushing from cafe to hotel to bar under garish streetlamps that bathe the streets in light the color of blood.
3. Certainly I knew bachelor dandies, drinkers of brandies – what young woman does not? (Only the young woman whose words are written by an older man.) I was born knowing the ways of men.
4. Handsomely attired young dandies and two women make merry around a table laden with grapes and peaches and berry tarts when from the dark shadows a skeleton approaches holding an hourglass.
5. Rebels and Martyrs: The Image of the Artist in the 1'th Century "Bohemians, vagabonds, visionaries, dandies, heroes" – so says the National Gallery in an attempt to sex–up this show about artists and their public image in the 1'th century.