51Թ

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View synonyms for

prefiguration

[ pree-fig-yuh-rey-shuhn, pree-fig- ]

noun

  1. the act of prefiguring.
  2. that in which something is prefigured.


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51Թ History and Origins

Origin of prefiguration1

1350–1400; Middle English prefiguracioun < Late Latin ھūپō- (stem of ھūپō ), equivalent to ھū ( us ) (past participle of ھū to prefigure ) + -ō- -ion
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Example Sentences

Examples have not been reviewed.

It’s a prefiguration — of how to think, how to collaborate, and how to stay sane when the private is gone.

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Since the early 20th century, Cycladic figures have had iconic power for contemporary artists, as an ancient prefiguration of abstraction.

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“I wouldn’t say it’s a prefiguration of Romanticism; it is already Romantic. Rather, he goes straight to contemporary music, straight to Alban Berg.”

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This future-facing prefiguration manifests one way that nostalgia isn’t destined solely to invite us into false romances with the past — it can also illuminate traditions that have long been operating in the margins.

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Avineri imagines them strolling through the spa and “sharing their ideas about history, past, present and possibly future,” in a “dramatic prefiguration of the encounter between Zion and Kremlin.”

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