Synonyms for romancer
Grammar : Noun |
Spell : noun, adjective roh-mans, roh-mans; verb roh-mans |
Phonetic Transcription : noun, adjective roʊˈmæns, ˈroʊ mæns; verb roʊˈmæns |
Top 10 synonyms for romancer Other synonyms for the word romancer
Définition of romancer
Origin :- mid-14c., "chronicler writing in French," from Old French romanceour, from romanz (see romance (n.)). Later, "one inclined to romantic imagination" (the main sense 19c.); modern use for "seducer, wooer" of a romantic quality appears to be a new formation c.1967 from romance (v.).
- As in visionary : noun person who dreams, is idealistic
- As in idealist : noun person who holds fancies in mind, who believes in perfection
- Hawthorne—it has been pointed out a hundred times—is the Puritan romancer.
- Extract from : « Four Americans » by Henry A. Beers
- “One must in justice admit that there is some provocation,” continued the romancer.
- Extract from : « Beasts and Super-Beasts » by Saki
- He is distinguished alike as a critic, a poet, and a romancer.
- Extract from : « Immortal Memories » by Clement Shorter
- It must not be forgotten that Theydon was a romancer, an idealist.
- Extract from : « Number Seventeen » by Louis Tracy
- The bishop's name would have slept with his fathers, the romancer is remembered.
- Extract from : « Poems » by Robert Lovell
- The romancer has an incontestable advantage over the historian.
- Extract from : « The Freebooters » by Gustave Aimard
- And though the story is true, yet it took a romancer to do it.
- Extract from : « The Complete Works of Nathaniel Hawthorne, Appendix to Volume XII: Tales, Sketches, and other Papers by Nathaniel Hawthorne with a Biographical Sketch by George Parsons Lathrop » by George Parsons Lathrop
- There is room, he said, for the romancer in these matters; but for the humourist, none.
- Extract from : « The Stoneground Ghost Tales » by E. G. Swain
- Mickey Vickins is a romancer, declared one of the highbrows.
- Extract from : « Droll Stories of Isthmian Life » by Evelyn Saxton
- This is either an inspiration of a romancer's imagination or a study.
- Extract from : « Catholic World, Vol. XI, April 1870-September 1870 » by Various
Antonyms for romancer
Based on : Thesaurus.com - Gutenberg.org - Dictionary.com - Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2019