Definitions for elegiacs

elegiacs el·e·gi·ac

Spelling: [el-i-jahy-uh k, -ak, ih-lee-jee-ak]
IPA: /ˌɛl ɪˈdʒaɪ ək, -æk, ɪˈli dʒiˌæk/

Elegiacs is a 8 letter English word. It's valid Scrabble word worth 10 points. It's valid Words with friends word worth 13 points.

You can make 261 anagrams from letters in elegiacs (aceegils).

Definitions for elegiacs

noun

  1. an elegiac or distich verse.
  2. a poem in such distichs or verses.

adjective

  1. used in, suitable for, or resembling an elegy.
  2. expressing sorrow or lamentation:
  3. Classical Prosody. noting a distich or couplet the first line of which is a dactylic hexameter and the second a pentameter, or a verse differing from the hexameter by suppression of the arsis or metrically unaccented part of the third and the sixth foot.

Origin of elegiacs

1575-85; (Middle French) Latin elegīacus Greek elegeiakós. See elegy, -ac

Examples for elegiacs

In this respect they are unlike the normal type of elegiac poetry.

They are variously loud, meditative, dramatic, witty, sexy, searing, and elegiac.

But he is one of the best deadline artists in the business, and his series on the dying of his father was unflinching and elegiac.

Lyrical, satirical, and elegiac poetry had been carried to perfection.

She let him wait awhile—then went to him with an elegiac manner.

The dishes she had left he carried away with an elegiac solemnity.

In the fine melancholy of his elegiac poetry he is almost modern.

As David Quammen described in his elegiac The Song of the Dodo, islands are “where species go to die.”

Six Feet Under ended its six-season run with perhaps the most elegiac, moving final scene a series has ever produced.

“I drive through the streets and see people without hope,” he says in the elegiac narration that ends the film.

Word Value for elegiacs
Scrable

10

Words with friends

13

Similar words for elegiacs
Word of the day