Literature
101Literature — One of the great mystical authors of the Middle Ages, Jan van Ruusbroec wrote devotional treatises from his monastery in the Forêt de Soignes in the 14th century. French poet Eustache Deschamps spent three years in Brussels about 1380 and… …
102Literature — Литература; художественная литература …
103LITERATURE — defined by Carlyle as an apocalypse of nature, a revealing of the open secret, a continuous revelation of the God like in the terrestrial and common, which ever endures there, and is brought out now in this dialect, now in that, with various… …
104literature — [14] Latin littera meant ‘letter’, and was the source of English letter. From it was derived literātus ‘having knowledge of letters’, hence ‘educated, learned’ (source of English literate [15]); and this formed the basis of the further derivative …
105literature — lit·er·a·ture || lɪtÉ™rÉ™tʃʊr / tʃə n. writings having lasting artistic value (i.e. poems, novels, essays, etc.); body of writing from a particular country (or time period, etc.); body of writing dealing with a certain subject; literary… …
106literature — stafas …
107literature — noun 1》 written works, especially those regarded as having artistic merit. 2》 books and writings on a particular subject. 3》 promotional or advisory leaflets and other material. Origin ME (in the sense knowledge of books ): via Fr. from L.… …
108literature — In science, the accumulation of scientific papers and materials published on a given subject …
109literature — n 1. letters, belles lettres, literary works, writings, republic of letters; prose, poetry, writing, creative writing, written art; classics, publications, books, the printed word; body of knowledge or infor mation, knowledge, pantology, lore. 2 …
110literature — lit·er·a·ture …