| 释义 | 
		Definition of Joycean in English: Joyceanadjective ˈdʒɔɪsɪənˈdʒɔɪsiən Relating to or characteristic of the Irish writer James Joyce or his works, especially with reference to the stream-of-consciousness technique.  a poetically Joycean monologue Example sentencesExamples -  His Georgian townhouse is beautifully restored thanks to the efforts of a Joycean enthusiast who saved the house from demolition.
 -  The lyrics mixed Joycean wordplay with private teen mythology.
 -  She has been joined in her opposition to the plan by a renowned Joycean scholar.
 -  Contemporary art, just like a lot of Joycean literature, became a rebellion, because they are saying we define art by that which is not art.
 -  It comes across as some kind of modernist Joycean construct.
 -  The stories themselves, running the gamut from visionary science fiction to well-wrought tales that end in Joycean anti-climax, do not offer up a clear sense of before and after.
 -  The centrepiece of this year's centenary celebrations was a symposium attended by 900 Joycean scholars from around the world.
 -  This ecstatic last chapter where love and death are necessary ingredients of this epiphany, so Joycean in style, leaves the reader in abeyance.
 
 
 noun ˈdʒɔɪsɪənˈdʒɔɪsiən A student or admirer of the Irish writer James Joyce or his works.  loyal Joyceans will find the show disappointing Example sentencesExamples -  My paper isn't on Ulysses; it's on Finnegans Wake, a novel that most Joyceans tend to avoid because it's so complex.
 -  Today in Dublin, wandering Joyceans will roam the city visiting many of the places where the book is set and attempt to reconstruct the events of the novel.
 -  The book should be of great interest to readers concerned to understand the current reach of Joyce criticism, as well as to modernists and Joyceans.
 -  Given that he was a Joycean, other linguistic considerations were involved, too.
 -  I haven't seen the film adaptation of Ulysses, but I hear some Joyceans respect and admire its attempt to film an unfilmable novel.
 -  Joyceans given to lengthy quotations from Ulysses should beware of reports of copyright police lurking at public readings as the ReJoyce Festival goes into top gear this week.
 -  The eminent Joycean and Professor of American Literature at Oxford mentioned to me hearing a paper of hers at an academic conference.
 
    Definition of Joycean in US English: Joyceanadjectiveˈdʒɔɪsiənˈjoisēən Relating to or characteristic of the Irish writer James Joyce or his works, especially with reference to the stream-of-consciousness technique.  a poetically Joycean monologue Example sentencesExamples -  This ecstatic last chapter where love and death are necessary ingredients of this epiphany, so Joycean in style, leaves the reader in abeyance.
 -  Contemporary art, just like a lot of Joycean literature, became a rebellion, because they are saying we define art by that which is not art.
 -  The stories themselves, running the gamut from visionary science fiction to well-wrought tales that end in Joycean anti-climax, do not offer up a clear sense of before and after.
 -  The lyrics mixed Joycean wordplay with private teen mythology.
 -  His Georgian townhouse is beautifully restored thanks to the efforts of a Joycean enthusiast who saved the house from demolition.
 -  It comes across as some kind of modernist Joycean construct.
 -  The centrepiece of this year's centenary celebrations was a symposium attended by 900 Joycean scholars from around the world.
 -  She has been joined in her opposition to the plan by a renowned Joycean scholar.
 
 
 nounˈdʒɔɪsiənˈjoisēən A student or admirer of the Irish writer James Joyce or his works.  loyal Joyceans will find the show disappointing Example sentencesExamples -  Joyceans given to lengthy quotations from Ulysses should beware of reports of copyright police lurking at public readings as the ReJoyce Festival goes into top gear this week.
 -  I haven't seen the film adaptation of Ulysses, but I hear some Joyceans respect and admire its attempt to film an unfilmable novel.
 -  The eminent Joycean and Professor of American Literature at Oxford mentioned to me hearing a paper of hers at an academic conference.
 -  The book should be of great interest to readers concerned to understand the current reach of Joyce criticism, as well as to modernists and Joyceans.
 -  My paper isn't on Ulysses; it's on Finnegans Wake, a novel that most Joyceans tend to avoid because it's so complex.
 -  Today in Dublin, wandering Joyceans will roam the city visiting many of the places where the book is set and attempt to reconstruct the events of the novel.
 -  Given that he was a Joycean, other linguistic considerations were involved, too.
 
     |