pietà
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English
[edit]Alternative forms
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From Italian pietà. Doublet of piety, and pity.
Noun
[edit]pietà (plural pietàs)
- A sculpture or painting of the Virgin Mary holding and mourning the dead body of Jesus.
- 1998, David Adams, “Afterword: The Artistic Alchemy of Joseph Beuys”, in Thomas Braatz, transl., Bees, Rudolf Steiner, page 195:
- Whereas Beuys's early sculptural work was consciously formed within a modernized version of the stylized Romanesque tradition of art, frequently with a Christian content such as crucifixions or pietàs, he gradually was able to free himself from this more traditional approach.
- 2009, Pico Iyer, “5: Making Kindness Stand to Reason”, in Rajiv Mehrotra, editor, Understanding the Dalai Lama, page 61:
- Ceremonial masks, Hindu deities, and pietàs shine down on you.
- 2011, Caroline van Eck, Stijn Bussels, Theatricality in Early Modern Art and Architecture, page 10:
- It does not show the events it depicts as static, frozen in the eternal present of historia sacra in the way many late medieval crucifixions, pietàs or annunciations do, but as a narrative.
See also
[edit]- pietà on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
- Category:Pietà on Wikimedia Commons.Wikimedia Commons
Anagrams
[edit]Italian
[edit]Alternative forms
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Inherited from Old Italian pietade, pietate, from Latin pietātem (“piety”, “pity”). By surface analysis, pio (“pious”) + -età (“-ity”).
Pronunciation
[edit]Noun
[edit]pietà f (invariable)
Derived terms
[edit]Related terms
[edit]Further reading
[edit]- pietà in Treccani.it – Vocabolario Treccani on line, Istituto dell'Enciclopedia Italiana
- Pietà (sentimento) on the Italian Wikipedia.Wikipedia it
- Pietà (arte) on the Italian Wikipedia.Wikipedia it
- Pietà (araldica) on the Italian Wikipedia.Wikipedia it
Lombard
[edit]Pronunciation
[edit]Noun
[edit]pietà f
Categories:
- English terms borrowed from Italian
- English terms derived from Italian
- English doublets
- English lemmas
- English nouns
- English countable nouns
- English terms spelled with À
- English terms spelled with ◌̀
- English terms with quotations
- Italian terms inherited from Old Italian
- Italian terms derived from Old Italian
- Italian terms inherited from Latin
- Italian terms derived from Latin
- Italian terms suffixed with -età
- Italian 2-syllable words
- Italian terms with IPA pronunciation
- Rhymes:Italian/a
- Rhymes:Italian/a/2 syllables
- Italian lemmas
- Italian nouns
- Italian indeclinable nouns
- Italian countable nouns
- Italian feminine nouns
- it:Art
- Lombard terms with IPA pronunciation
- Lombard lemmas
- Lombard nouns
- Lombard feminine nouns