Definition, Meaning, Synonyms & Anagrams | English word PROEM


PROEM

Definitions of PROEM

  1. An introduction, preface or preamble.

4

5

Number of letters

5

Is palindrome

No

7
EM
OE
OEM
PR
PRO
RO
ROE

17

17

102
EM
EMO
EMP
EMR
EO
EOM
EOP
EOR
EP
EPO
EPR
ER
ERM

Examples of Using PROEM in a Sentence

  • It consists of a prayer in cuaderna via to God and the Virgin in which he requests their help, a proem in prose that adopts the genre of cult sermon (or divisio intra, but written in Spanish) that could be parodic, another prayer invoking the divine favor to finish the book, and finally ending with two lyrical couplets to Santa MarĂ­a.
  • The story is made up of an introduction and a complaint by Anelida which is in turn made up of a proem, a strophe, antistrophe and a conclusion.
  • And while the Pesikta rarely quotes lengthy homiletic excerpts after the proems, Leviticus Rabbah quotes such materials after the conclusion of a proem, in the course of each chapter, and even toward the end of a chapter.
  • ; this proem contains also the final sentence which serves as introduction to the section Isaiah 49:14, and it is known from the Pesiqta pericope 17 to be a proem to a discourse on this section, which is intended for the second "consolatory Sabbath" after Tisha B'Av.
  • He opens the book, in the proem, stating his belief that the man who succeeds in "kindling a light in nature", would be "the benefactor indeed of the human race, the propagator of man's empire over the universe, the champion of liberty, the conqueror and subduer of necessities", and at the same time identifying himself as that man, saying he believed he "had been born for the service of mankind", and that in considering in what way mankind might best be served, he had found none so great as the discovery of new arts, endowments, and commodities for the bettering of man's life.
  • Nineteen manuscripts contain the Libelle, which consists of about 1,100 lines in rhyming couplets, with a proem in rhyme-royal and a stanzaic envoi that differs between the poem's two editions.
  • " Professor Santucci wrote that she has defined the Supreme in the Proem to The Secret Doctrine as an "Omnipresent, Eternal, Boundless, and Immutable Principle on which all speculation is impossible, since it transcends the power of human conception and could only be dwarfed by any human expression or similitude.



Search for PROEM in:






Page preparation took: 112.83 ms.