Synonyms for bathos


Grammar : Noun
Spell : bey-thos, -thaws, -thohs
Phonetic Transcription : ˈbeɪ θɒs, -θɔs, -θoʊs


Définition of bathos

Origin :
  • "anticlimax, a descent from the sublime to the ridiculous," 1727, from Greek bathos "depth," related to bathys "deep" (see benthos). Introduced by Pope.
  • noun sentimentality
Example sentences :
  • It was an anti-climax, a bathos, of which St. Augustine is seldom guilty.
  • Extract from : « My New Curate » by P.A. Sheehan
  • There is sometimes, too, a falling off, not far removed from the Bathos.
  • Extract from : « A Pindarick Ode on Painting » by Thomas Morrison
  • One of their favourite blunders is an amazing sort of bathos.
  • Extract from : « Utopia of Usurers and other Essays » by Gilbert Keith Chesterton
  • Outwardly cynical, he was sentimental to the point of bathos.
  • Extract from : « Narcissus » by Evelyn Scott
  • Then will come the crowning event, after which all must necessarily be bathos.
  • Extract from : « Girls of the True Blue » by L. T. Meade
  • It was called, by a kind of bathos in nomenclature, “America.”
  • Extract from : « The Indian in his Wigwam » by Henry R. Schoolcraft
  • The romance of these remarkable espousals was not to find its conclusion in bathos.
  • Extract from : « Vendetta » by Marie Corelli
  • Under the circumstances, there was bathos amid the poor girl's pathos!
  • Extract from : « Wanted: A Cook » by Alan Dale
  • This may be bathos in individual cases, yet it is the offspring of truth.
  • Extract from : « Scribner's Magazine, Volume 26, July 1899 » by Various
  • "The ghost of God," I answered, in what she must have thought a tone of bathos!
  • Extract from : « The Last Miracle » by M. P. Shiel

Antonyms for bathos

Based on : Thesaurus.com - Gutenberg.org - Dictionary.com - Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2019