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Middlemarch

American  
[mid-l-mahrch] / ˈmɪd lˌmɑrtʃ /

noun

  1. a novel (1871–72) by George Eliot.


Example Sentences

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Pennington also had roles in several BBC productions, including The Witches of Pendle, Oedipus The King and an adaptation of Middlemarch.

From BBC • May 11, 2026

Ross finds “traces” of Wagner in Middlemarch, Waldorf schools, Disney iconography, comic-book superheroes, and the fantasies that drove Viennese urban planners and architects of Chicago skyscrapers.

From Slate • Oct. 17, 2020

With six people in a small flat with one heated room, she later said, nobody was going to do Middlemarch.

From BBC • Feb. 15, 2019

War and Peace and Middlemarch I didn’t really get on with.

From The Guardian • Nov. 3, 2018

Emma was thrilled by the presence of one of the guests—the novelist known as George Eliot, author of one of Emma’s favorite books, Middlemarch.

From "Charles and Emma: The Darwins' Leap of Faith" by Deborah Heiligman

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