oneiric
Appearance
English
[edit]Alternative forms
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From oneir- + -ic, ultimately from Ancient Greek ὀνείρειος (oneíreios).
Pronunciation
[edit]- (US) IPA(key): /oʊˈnaɪ.ɹɪk/
- (UK) IPA(key): /əʊˈnaɪ.ɹɪk/
Audio (Southern England): (file) - Hyphenation: o‧nei‧ric
Adjective
[edit]oneiric (comparative more oneiric, superlative most oneiric)
- Of or pertaining to dreams.
- 2007, Khaled Besbes, The Semiotics of Beckett's Theatre, →ISBN, page 238:
- Dreams contain oneiric images and oneiric symbols. Both of them are, in fact, 'distorted' manifestations of a latent content which resides in the dreamer's unconscious.
- Resembling a dream; dreamlike.
- 2007, Richard John Neupert, A History of the French New Wave Cinema, →ISBN, page 109:
- Rather, novelist Louise de Vilmorin, whose popular novel Madame de had been recently filmed by Max Ophuls, joined Malle in reworking Denon's novella and updating it into a combination of a modern comedy of manners and a daring, even oneiric love story that played with and defied many conventions of the romance genre.
- 2013 September 21, Thomas Marks, “The Memory Palace: a Book of Lost Interiors, by Edward Hollis, review [print edition: Compendium of things now missing]”, in The Daily Telegraph (Review)[1], page R29:
- […] The Memory Palace [is] Edward Hollis's idiosyncratic tour of a series of historical interiors that have all disappeared or been dismantled. […] Hollis might have done far more with literature's unique contribution to our sense of domestic space as both commemorative and creative. […] [A]mid all the palaces with their dreamlike interiors, there is puzzlingly no place for the many oneiric palaces of poetry.
Related terms
[edit]Translations
[edit]of or pertaining to dreams
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resembling a dream; dreamlike — see dreamlike