Hogarth









Hogarth


Hogarth [hoh-gahrth] Examples noun

  1. William,1697–1764, English painter and engraver.

Related formsHo·garth·i·an, adjective Examples from the Web for hogarth Contemporary Examples of hogarth

  • The delicate cross-hatching that reached back to Hogarth and Dore was not as precise as it had been, but he was over 80 now.

    Maurice Sendak Is Remembered Fondly by Author and Filmmaker William Joyce

    William Joyce

    May 9, 2012

  • Historical Examples of hogarth

  • These words are quite in the spirit of Hogarth’s later “Time smoking a Picture.”

    De Libris: Prose and Verse

    Austin Dobson

  • What would Hogarth have said, had he lived at the present day?

    The Mirror of Literature, Amusement, and Instruction, Vol. 10, Issue 266, July 28, 1827

    Various

  • No one can suspect Hogarth to have been tainted by the vices he exposed.

    The International Monthly, Volume 3, No. 2, May, 1851

    Various

  • The tomb was afterwards accompanied with one to Mrs. Hogarth’s dog.

    The International Monthly, Volume 3, No. 2, May, 1851

    Various

  • Hogarth quarrelled with Churchill, and drew him as a bear in canonicals.

    Leading Articles on Various Subjects

    Hugh Miller

  • British Dictionary definitions for hogarth Hogarth noun

    1. William. 1697–1764, English engraver and painter. He is noted particularly for his series of engravings satirizing the vices and affectations of his age, such as A Rake’s Progress (1735) and Marriage à la Mode (1745)

    Derived FormsHogarthian, adjective

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