pasquinade
21pasquinade — pas•quin•ade [[t]ˌpæs kwəˈneɪd[/t]] n. v. ad•ed, ad•ing 1) a satire or lampoon, esp. one posted in a public place 2) to satirize in a pasquinade • Etymology: 1585–95; Pasquin < It Pasquino, name given an antique Roman statue unearthed in 1501… …
22pasquinade — /pæskwəˈneɪd/ (say paskwuh nayd) noun 1. a satire, lampoon, or parody. 2. a publicly posted lampoon. –verb (t) (pasquinaded, pasquinading) 3. to assail in a pasquinade or pasquinades. {French, from Italian pasquinata, from Pasquino, name given to …
23PASQUINADE — s. f. Il se dit Des placards satiriques qu on attache à la statue de Pasquin à Rome ; et, par extension, Des railleries bouffonnes et triviales. Faire des pasquinades. Un faiseur de pasquinades …
24PASQUINADE — n. f. Il se dit des Placards satiriques qu’on attachait à la statue de Pasquin à Rome; et, par extension, de Railleries bouffonnes et triviales. Faire des pasquinades. Un faiseur de pasquinades …
25pasquinade — [ˌpaskwɪ neɪd] noun a satire or lampoon, originally one displayed or delivered in a public place. Origin C16: from Ital. pasquinata, from Pasquino, a statue in Rome on which abusive Latin verses were posted …
26pasquinade — n. Lampoon, satire …
27pasquinade — pas·quin·ade …
28pasquinade — n. lampoon, especially exhibited in public place …
29pasquinade — n. a lampoon or satire, orig. one displayed in a public place. Etymology: It. pasquinata f. Pasquino, a statue in Rome on which abusive Latin verses were annually posted …
30I, the Supreme — infobox Book | name = I, the Supreme title orig = Yo el supremo translator = Helen Lane image caption = The cover of the first US edition of the novel s translation, published by Alfred A. Knopf. author = Augusto Roa Bastos illustrator = cover… …