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Meaning of allegory | Babel Free

Noun feminine CEFR C2 Specialized
ˈælɪɡəɹi

Definitions

  1. The use of symbols which may be interpreted to reveal a hidden, broader message, usually a moral or political one, about real-world issues and occurrences; also, the interpretation of such symbols.
    rhetoric, uncountable
  2. A picture, story, or other form of communication in which one or more characters, events, or places are used to reveal a hidden, broader message about real-world issues and occurrences.
    broadly, countable, uncountable
  3. A character or thing which symbolically represents someone or something else; an emblem, a symbol.
    broadly, countable, uncountable
  4. A category that retains some of the structure of the category of binary relations between sets, representing a high-level generalization of that category.
    broadly, countable, uncountable

Equivalents

العربية أمثولة الرّمز تمثيل مجاز
Azərbaycanca kinayə təmsil
Bosanski alegorija parabola
Català al·legoria
Čeština alegorie jinotaj
Ελληνικά αλληγορία
Esperanto alegorio
Español alegoría
Français Allégorie
Gàidhlig samhla
עברית משל
Hrvatski alegorija parabola
Bahasa Indonesia alegori
Italiano allegoria
日本語 アレゴリー 寓言 寓話 比喩
ქართული ალეგორია
Қазақша тұспалдау
Kurdî alegorî
Lietuvių alegorija
Polski alegoria
Português alegoria parábola
Српски alegorija parabola
Українська алегорія

Examples

“In theſe teſtimonies vvhich they alledge of the ſcripture there are certayne, vvhiche are vvell nere of no vvayghte, but there is none of them, but eyther it is darke vvith the myſte of allegorie: or els it dothe receyue dyuerſe and manifolde interpretations.”
“As some of the finest compositions among the ancients are in allegory, I have endeavoured, in several of my papers, to revive that way of writing, and hope I have not been altogether unsuccessful in it; […]”
“Allegory Metaphors continues still, / Which with new graces every sentence fill.”
“Allegory and Poetic Delineation, as I said above, cannot be religious Faith: the Faith itself must first be there, then Allegory enough will gather round it, as the fit body round its soul.”
“[T]houghe ſome woordes ſpoken by the mouthe of Chriſt written in ſcripture, be to be vnderſtanden only by way of a ſimilitude or an allegory: it foloweth not therupõ [thereupon] that of neceſſitye euerye like woorde of Chriſt in other places was none other but an allegory.”
“[…] Abraham had two ſonnes, the one by a bondmaid, the other by a freewoman. But he who was of the bondwoman, was borne after the fleſh: but hee of the freewoman, was by promiſe. Which things are an Allegorie; for theſe are the two Couenants; the one from the mount Sinai, which gendereth to bondage, which is Agar. […] But Jeruſalem which is aboue is free, which is the mother of vs all.”
“[T]hey held the Creed in the plain literal ſenſe thereof vvithout any ſhuffling Allegories, […]”
“And thus it vvas: I vvriting of the VVay / And Race of Saints, in this our Goſpel-Day, / Fell ſuddenly into an Allegory / About their Journey, and the vvay to Glory, / In more than tvventy things, vvhich I ſet dovvn; […]”
“They diſcover in every paſſage ſome ſecret meaning, ſome remote alluſion, ſome artful allegory, or ſome occult imitation, vvhich no other reader every ſuspected; […]”
“Ah! the Roman emperor, who desired that his slavery might be alleviated by his fetters being made of gold, was a very rational person. I have always considered it an allegory, showing the necessity of marrying for money.”
“So ignorant are most landsmen of some of the plainest and most palpable wonders of the world, that without some hints touching the plain facts, historical and otherwise, of the fishery, they might scout at Moby Dick as a monstrous fable, or still worse and more detestable, a hideous and intolerable allegory.”
“[T]he Harp of Ireland, puts me in mind, of that Glorious Embleme, or Allegory, vvherein the vviſdome of Antiquity, did figure, and ſhadovv out, vvorks of this Nature.”
“Among all the great men of antiquity, Procruſtes ſhall never be my hero of legiſlation; vvith his iron bed, the allegory of his government, and the type of ſome modern policy, by vvhich the long limb vvas to be cut ſhort, and the ſhort tortured into length. Such vvas this ſtate bed of uniformity!”
“There were casts of the Gladiator—he whose native courage struggled against the doom which was yet welcome—a mournful allegory of honour.”

CEFR level

C2
Mastery
This word is part of the CEFR C2 vocabulary — mastery level.
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