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Petrarch
[ pee-trahrk, pe- ]
noun
- Francesco Petrarca, 1304–74, Italian poet and scholar.
Petrarch
/ ˈpɛtrɑːk /
noun
- Petrarch13041374MItalianWRITING: poetMISC: scholar Italian name Francesco Petrarca. 1304–74, Italian lyric poet and scholar, who greatly influenced the values of the Renaissance. His collection of poems Canzoniere, inspired by his ideal love for Laura, was written in the Tuscan dialect. He also wrote much in Latin, esp the epic poem Africa (1341) and the Secretum (1342), a spiritual self-analysis
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Derived Forms
- Peˈtrarchan, adjective
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Example Sentences
Perhaps it sounded more forceful in the language of Dante and Petrarch, but fair enough.
From The Daily Beast
The centenary of Petrarch celebrated at Avignon in 1874 tended to emphasize the importance and the glory of the new literature.
From Project Gutenberg
Petrarch, speaking of her and her young husband surrounded by Hungarians, refers to them as two lambs among wolves.
From Project Gutenberg
The climate of Avignon, though so strangely inveighed against by Petrarch, is at once healthy and salubrious.
From Project Gutenberg
Petrarch was truly an original; I know no one to whom he can be compared.
From Project Gutenberg
We next visited the convent of St. Claire, where Petrarch first beheld his mistress.
From Project Gutenberg
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