Crossword-Solution: CHIVALRIC
Dictionary
| Word | Word Type | Definition |
|---|---|---|
| Chivalric | a. | Relating to chivalry; knightly; chivalrous. |
We have 5 clues for the answer “CHIVALRIC”
| Clue | Answers |
|---|---|
| the knightly years | 1 answer |
| MEDIEVAL romance, basis of the | 4 answers |
| knightly | 9 answers |
| CHARACTERISTIC OF THE TIME OF CHIVALRY AND KNIGHTHOOD IN THE MIDDLE AGES | 11 answers |
| Chivalrous | 31 answers |
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Hint 1 meaning
One who, or that which, eats.
Hint 2 anagram
REATE
Hint 3 another clue
greedy person
16 +2
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Sentences with CHIVALRIC (5)
When the general urged them to their chivalric charge he half drew his sword from the scabbard; and then, as if ashamed of such melodrama, thrust it back again.
She tortured herself with thoughts of the ambitions she had held, and which had been so cruelly mocked that very morning; of the chivalric love that had been hers, of the life even that had been hers, and which had been given up for her so tragically.
Was not the leader a knights the knight of truest courage? All that was high, chivalric in the old man sprang up to own him Lord.
The chivalric spirit soon achieved the downfall of the ordeal system, and established the judicial combat on a basis too firm to be shaken.
What we did, or how we did it, little concerns me here, except that, owing to my esteem for chivalric blood and breeding, I was led into many practices and excesses which cost my guardian and myself a good deal of money.
Quotes with CHIVALRIC (3)
I mean,” he said, “that by your own showing, the greatest threat to heaven comes from within the ranks of the angels themselves. Before you can prove to me that heroes can defeat villains with nothing but the purest chivalric ideals, you must convince me that heroes do exist, and that villains are not a fanciful tale for children. You must tell me, sir, if you dare, that you are incorruptible, and that your colleagues and commanders are as pure as you.
I suppose that someday, suddenly, I will be transferred to another age, for example the chivalric or the bronze. The hope is, of course, that I arrive in period dress but not resemble a contemporary luminary, for I wish to simply onlook. But, more probably, thanks to chronologically garbled garb, or my mistakable face — which will lead to expectations of competence — I will have to explain my occurrence. That explained, I will have to explain my age, The Present, also known a…
The first modern novel was already a product, even an expression, of negative criticism: 'Don Quixote' contains a quite explicit critique of the chivalric romance and its insufficiency to account for the way real life feels when you get up in the morning in 17th-century Spain.