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anagnorisis
[ an-ag-nawr-uh-sis, -nohr- ]
noun
plural anagnorises
- (in ancient Greek tragedy) the critical moment of recognition or discovery, especially preceding peripeteia.
anagnorisis
/ ˌæəɡˈɒɪɪ /
noun
- (in Greek tragedy) the recognition or discovery by the protagonist of the identity of some character or the nature of his own predicament, which leads to the resolution of the plot; denouement
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yvlog History and Origins
Origin of anagnorisis1
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yvlog History and Origins
Origin of anagnorisis1
from Greek: recognition
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Example Sentences
Examples have not been reviewed.
It’s an example of anagnorisis, the recognition of a character’s true nature, a literary device reaching back to Oedipus and beyond.
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To make that point, Mr. Hall said the play had to end with Beale undergoing “a moment of anagnorisis” — some final realization about the truth of his experience.
From
That’s because we have reached that key theatrical moment, which Aristotle famously called “anagnorisis” or “recognition.”
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