buskined
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English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Adjective
[edit]buskined (not comparable)
- Wearing buskins.
- 1713, [Alexander] Pope, Windsor-Forest. […], London: […] Bernard Lintott […], →OCLC:
- Her buskin'd virgins traced the dewy lawn.
- Trodden by buskins.
- a. 1645, John Milton, “Il Penseroso”, in Poems of Mr. John Milton, […], London: […] Ruth Raworth for Humphrey Mosely, […], published 1646, →OCLC:
- Or what (though rare) of later age, / Ennobled hath the buskined stage.
- Tragic, dignified or serious in style.
- 2008, Johann Gottfried Herder, translated by Gregory Moore, Shakespeare, pages 7–8:
- That simplicity of the Greek plot, that sobriety of Greek manners, that sustained, buskined style of expression, song making, spectacle […] all these things lay […] in the origins of Greek tragedy.