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Veronese
1[ver-uh-neez, -nees]
Veronese
2[ver-uh-ney-zee, ve-
noun
Paolo Paolo Cagliari, 1528–88, Venetian painter.
Veronese
/ ±¹±ð°ù´Çˈ²Ô±ð˲õ±ð /
noun
Paolo (ˈpaËolo), original name Paolo Cagliari or Caliari. 1528–88, Italian painter of the Venetian school. His works include The Marriage at Cana (1563) and The Feast of the Levi (1573)
51³Ô¹Ï History and Origins
Example Sentences
Dr Veronese said she thought the changed first line and the lack of mention of Shakespeare were the reasons "why this poem has passed un-noticed as a copy of Sonnet 116 all these years".
Veronese is also a co-author on the Alzheimer's & Dementia journal article.
In the scene, Mr. Whiting’s Romeo rises from bed and basks in the Veronese sunshine, his bare backside onscreen for several seconds.
After Napoleon’s defeat, French officials were not as accommodating with the Veronese.
From the start: The opening calmly built toward what the conductor John Eliot Gardiner has called an aural analogue to an “altarpiece by Veronese or Tintoretto†— immersive, its elements gaining sweep from their interplay.
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