What is another word for allusions?

Pronunciation: [ɐlˈuːʒənz] (IPA)

Allusions are references made to literary, historical or cultural events, figures, or objects. Many synonyms can be used for allusions, including alludes, refers, invokes, cites, hints, evokes, mentions, suggests. Some other synonyms for allusions are illusions, imitations, emulations, and similes. Illusion is a false notion or misleading representation of events, while imitation implies copying or following an original style. Emulation is about imitation with the aim of equaling or surpassing. Simile is a type of allusion where a comparison is created between two unlike things using "like" or "as." Whatever synonym is chosen for allusions, it should convey the act of referring to something indirectly as a way of enriching the meaning of the text.

Synonyms for Allusions:

What are the paraphrases for Allusions?

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What are the hypernyms for Allusions?

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

Usage examples for Allusions

Now, Scripture is literature, besides being a great deal more; and, as such, it is absurd to object to all allusions to it in other literature.
"The Expositor's Bible: The Book of Exodus"
G. A. Chadwick
Some he was enabled to spell out, but they referred to places and events he had never heard of, and were filled with allusions he could not fathom.
"The Martins Of Cro' Martin, Vol. II (of II)"
Charles James Lever
Its illustrations are drawn from English industrial life, and its very money allusions are stated in terms of English coin.
"Contemporary Socialism"
John Rae

Famous quotes with Allusions

  • I had no allusions of radio success. I just loved being in studios. I was having fun and in that sense I now feel a lot like I did when I did that record.
    Matthew Sweet
  • A tragedy can never suffer by delay: a comedy may, because the allusions or the manners represented in it maybe temporary.
    Horace Walpole
  • To anyone brought up when English literature, scripture, liturgy, poetry and hymns were still taught and learned, it is astonishing to find out how little they have in common with those who were raised and educated in the post-revolutionary culture. The pre-revolutionary survivor can finish other people's sentences, detect the rhythm in other people's speeches, recognise a score of allusions in a page of print. There is hardly a word or phrase which does not awake a richer thought, or an echo of something hauntingly similar. (p.196)
    Peter Hitchens
  • One of the bad effects of an anti-intellectual philosophy, such as that of Bergson, is that it thrives upon the errors and confusions of the intellect. Hence it is led to prefer bad thinking to good, to declare every momentary difficulty insoluble, and to regard every foolish mistake as revealing the bankruptcy of intellect and the triumph of intuition. There are in Bergson’s works many allusions to mathematics and science, and to a careless reader these allusions may seem to strengthen his philosophy greatly. As regards science, especially biology and physiology, I am not competent to criticize his interpretations. But as regards mathematics, he has deliberately preferred traditional errors in interpretation to the more modern views which have prevailed among mathematicians for the last eighty years. In this matter, he has followed the example of most philosophers. In the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, the infinitesimal calculus, though well developed as a method, was supported, as regards its foundations, by many fallacies and much confused thinking. Hegel and his followers seized upon these fallacies and confusions, to support them in their attempt to prove all mathematics self-contradictory. Thence the Hegelian account of these matters passed into the current thought of philosophers, where it has remained long after the mathematicians have removed all the difficulties upon which the philosophers rely. And so long as the main object of philosophers is to show that nothing can be learned by patience and detailed thinking, but that we ought rather to worship the prejudices of the ignorant under the title of ‘reason’ if we are Hegelians, or of ‘intuition’ if we are Bergsonians, so long philosophers will take care to remain ignorant of what mathematicians have done to remove the errors by which Hegel profited.
    Henri Bergson
  • When Humphries writes his prose can scarcely contain its freight of cultivated allusions. He writes the most nutritiously rococo English in Australia today, but nobody will be able to inherit it. To know him would not be enough. You would have to know what he knows.
    Clive James

Related words: allusion definition, simile definition, metaphor definition, personification definition, allusion examples, simile examples, metaphor examples, personification examples

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  • Examples of allusions?
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