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allusion
[uh-loo-zhuhn]
noun
a passing or casual reference; an incidental mention of something, either directly or by implication.
The novel's title is an allusion to Shakespeare.
the act of alluding; the making of a casual or indirect reference to something.
The Bible is a fertile source of allusion in art.
Obsolete., a metaphor or parable.
allusion
/ əˈluːʒən /
noun
the act of alluding
a passing reference; oblique or obscure mention
allusion
An indirect reference to some piece of knowledge not actually mentioned. Allusions usually come from a body of information that the author presumes the reader will know. For example, an author who writes, “She was another Helen,” is alluding to the proverbial beauty of Helen of Troy.
Other Word Forms
- preallusion noun
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of allusion1
Example Sentences
We see how many people he kills within the show, but there’s an allusion to more in his past.
One of the pleasures here is witnessing both actors reanimate the rhythms of a long-ago conversation, their text absent the typical tidiness of a screenplay and instead an interwoven network of inflection, attitude, allusion.
"A 10-year-old child who doesn't understand a joke or an allusion, it's not a big deal. They will understand it at 15, 20, or 40 years old. There are several levels of interpretation."
The allusion to economic justifications for the Confederacy’s inhumane cruelty is mocked and transformed, while also implying the process as Black reparation.
And despite the fact that the story plays out less than 15 years after the end of World War II, there isn’t a single allusion to the war’s impact on the country.
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