Definitions
from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 5th Edition.
- noun The 16th century, especially in Italian art and literature.
from The Century Dictionary.
- noun The sixteenth century, with reference to Italy, and especially with reference to the fine arts of that period.
- Executed or designed in the sixteenth century: applied specifically to the decorative art and architecture characteristic of the attempt at purification of style and reversion to classical forms which attained full development in Italy at the beginning of the sixteenth century; also often loosely applied to ornament of the sixteenth century in general, properly included in the term renaissance.
- Living in the sixteenth century.
from the GNU version of the Collaborative International Dictionary of English.
- The sixteenth century, when applied to Italian art or literature.
Etymologies
from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 4th Edition
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Examples
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He went from the portrait of a "cinquecento" cardinal to
His Own People Booth Tarkington 1907
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This car doesn't just have a narrative—the retro-modern version of the Italian classic cinquecento ; the U.S. return of the Fiat brand after more than two decades; Chrysler's postbankruptcy status as fiefdom of Fiat.
For the Cheerleader in Everyone Dan Neil 2011
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For more on the "play" of memory and its influence on cinquecento compositional invention, see chapter 3 of Bolzoni's Gallery of Memory, "Memory Games."
Architecture and Memory: The Renaissance Studioli of Federico da Montefeltro 2008
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The influence of these open-ended images and other recondite forms of cerebral play on courts such as Urbino's has been discussed by Luciano Cheles, among others (Studiolo of Urbino, 82 – 87), and continues into the cinquecento.
Architecture and Memory: The Renaissance Studioli of Federico da Montefeltro 2008
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Machiavelli's suggestion, for example, that a prince "not deviate from what is good, if possible, but be able to do evil if constrained," must be appreciated in context. 140 Although political and military leaders were exhorted to virtues of constancy and temperance, the late quattrocento (and early cinquecento) was not a juste milieu, as Machiavelli illustrates:
Architecture and Memory: The Renaissance Studioli of Federico da Montefeltro 2008
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The diminutive 500 or, cinquecento, as it's called in Italy, is an updated throwback to the car that put that country on wheels after the Second World War.
Michael Rose: LA Auto Show: Kick Some Tires on Thanksgiving Michael Rose 2010
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Tiny cars, microcars, a cinquecento and an EV future
Kirsten Dirksen: The Beauty of Slow Driving: Living With a Golf Cart As a Second Car (VIDEO) 2010
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In chapter 3 of The Gallery of Memory, Lina Bolzoni details how these games became increasingly complex and commonplace during the cinquecento. back
Architecture and Memory: The Renaissance Studioli of Federico da Montefeltro 2008
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Fiat The Fiat 500 -- cinquecento in Italian -- has been a big hit in Europe since it entered the market in July 2007.
Fiat's Key Cars 2009
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Paintings from the National Gallery's collections, including a "Judith With the Head of Holofernes," attributed to Mantegna, and a portrait of a Venetian gentleman on which Giorgione and the young Titian both worked, at once suggest the currency of Tullio's distinctive approach in the early cinquecento and how that approach was formed.
qms commented on the word cinquecento
It seems the Wordnikonians have run out of aboriginal and French words with which to taunt us and are now resorting to Italian.
Return from Japan with a memento -
A clever gizmo or lacquered bento,
But when you get home
From your visit to Rome
Your souvenir is the cinquecento.
Our intrepid collector is on the case but, as usual, his trusting nature puts him in peril of error:
Poor Ernest they fool with casual ease
And "cinquecento" is the latest tease.
They think it funny
To tell him it's money
And means "small change" in Chinese.
For more on the gullible Ernest Bafflewit see methinks and cahot.
May 5, 2014