Antonyms for prose
Grammar : Noun |
Spell : prohz |
Phonetic Transcription : proʊz |
Definition of prose
Origin :- c.1300, "story, narration," from Old French prose (13c.), from Latin prosa oratio "straightforward or direct speech" (without the ornaments of verse), from prosa, fem. of prosus, earlier prorsus "straightforward, direct," from Old Latin provorsus "(moving) straight ahead," from pro- "forward" (see pro-) + vorsus "turned," past participle of vertere "to turn" (see verse).
- "Good prose, to say nothing of the original thoughts it conveys, may be infinitely varied in modulation. It is only an extension of metres, an amplification of harmonies, of which even the best and most varied poetry admits but few." [Walter Savage Landor, "Imaginary Conversations"]
- Meaning "prose writing; non-poetry" is from mid-14c. The sense of "dull or commonplace expression" is from 1680s, out of earlier sense "plain expression" (1560s). Those who lament the want of an English agent noun to correspond to poet might try prosaist (1776), proser (1620s), or Frenchified prosateur (1880), though the first two in their day also acquired in English the secondary sense "dull writer."
- noun written, nonrhythmic literature
- Prose, that is, has attempted something to which it is not equal.
- Extract from : « Short Studies on Great Subjects » by James Anthony Froude
- He himself describes them as "Prose Recreations of a Rhymer."
- Extract from : « Punch, or the London Charivari, Vol. 104, April 29, 1893 » by Various
- Well, Prose, are you thinking of your friends in Cheap-side?
- Extract from : « The King's Own » by Captain Frederick Marryat
- Why, you ought, Prose,” replied Seymour; “you have never been on service yet.
- Extract from : « The King's Own » by Captain Frederick Marryat
- Seymour and Prose had both passed their examination, when the Aspasia was at Bombay.
- Extract from : « The King's Own » by Captain Frederick Marryat
- Prose can paint evening and moonlight, but poets are needed to sing the dawn.
- Extract from : « Diana of the Crossways, Complete » by George Meredith
- Prose must be rhythmical, and it may be as much so as you will; but it must not be metrical.
- Extract from : « Essays in the Art of Writing » by Robert Louis Stevenson
- Prose pleased only people whose intelligence was very subtle.
- Extract from : « The Red Lily, Complete » by Anatole France
- But in the tiny landscapes of the Prose Poems there is nothing rigid or artificial.
- Extract from : « Egoists » by James Huneker
- What should hinder, then, but that this same Seventh Book should have been written in Prose?
- Extract from : « Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, No. 404, June, 1849 » by Various
Synonyms for prose
Based on : Thesaurus.com - Gutenberg.org - Dictionary.com - Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2019