What is another word for wordsworthian?

Pronunciation: [wɜːdswˈɜːði͡ən] (IPA)

"Wordsworthian" refers to the style and works of the Romantic poet William Wordsworth. Synonyms for "Wordsworthian" might include "Romantic," "Nature-inspired," "Lyrical," "Poetic," and "Flowery." Within a literary context, "Wordsworthian" could also be substituted with "pastorally-inclined," "elevated," or "transcendent." Depending on the specific aspect being referenced, one might also use "introspective," "reflective," or "nostalgic." As Wordsworth's work has often been associated with rural landscapes and depictions of nature, "rustic" or "bucolic" might also be appropriate synonyms. While "Wordsworthian" represents a specific style and era, the synonyms offer a variety of descriptions that can be used to convey similar ideas and experiences in writing and conversation.

Synonyms for Wordsworthian:

What are the hypernyms for Wordsworthian?

A hypernym is a word with a broad meaning that encompasses more specific words called hyponyms.

Usage examples for Wordsworthian

To make 'Nature' really interesting you must have a touch of wordsworthian pantheism and of Shelley's 'pathetic fallacy.
"English Literature and Society in the Eighteenth Century"
Leslie Stephen
My story is written for the sole purpose of amusing you, and as a form of diversion for your leisure moments I would select neither the wordsworthian pastoral, nor the platonic doctrine of Ideas.
"Paul Patoff"
F. Marion Crawford
Linnell's landscape seemed to me the full expression of a healthy love of nature, possible only to a moral sanity in the man-a cheery wordsworthian enjoyment of her, which as a rule I have never found in perfection out of the English school and its derivatives; the outpouring of a robust nature which prefers to see the outer world with the spectacles of no school, and through the memory of no other man; not self-taught in the sense of owing nothing to another mind, but in the sense that what he had learned he had digested and forgotten except as a chance word in the universal gospel of art; technically weak, slovenly in style, but eminently successful in telling the story he had to tell.
"The Autobiography of a Journalist, Volume I"
William James Stillman

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