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Answer for the clue "Like "Lohengrin," e.g ", 8 letters:
operatic

Alternative clues for the word operatic

Word definitions for operatic in dictionaries

Wiktionary Word definitions in Wiktionary
a. Of, related to, or typical of opera.

Usage examples of operatic.

Lehmann, Alvary, and Fischer, the operatic problem might be regarded as solved.

There have been a few representations in English within this time and a considerable number in Italian, our operatic institutions being quick, as a rule, to put it upon the stage whenever they have at command a soprano leggiero with a voice of sufficient range and flexibility to meet the demands of the extraordinary music which Mozart wrote for the Queen of Night to oblige his voluble-throated sister-in-law, Mme.

As a scramjet, the note was highest of all, a screaming operatic soprano.

Few operatic works are musically more important, and yet less pretentious.

Each galaxy was a harmonic undertone to the operatic whole which sang thunderously and unheeded to the unsentient darkness.

Besides these operatic performances and his symphony concerts, he gathered about him a succession of young virtuosi pianists.

The waiter began to sing about the Chianti grapes in a beautiful operatic voice.

The clothes looked more like fancy-dress costumes than anything one could wear day to day: court jester crossed with harlequin crossed with Peter Pan, rainbow colours, zig-zag hems, Kate Greenaway layers of flowing fabrics, ballet tights and operatic coats for flower children.

It is sad to contemplate the number of people who think they can sing and are destined by talent and temperament for operatic careers, who have been led by misguided or foolish friends and too often by overambitious and mercenary singing masters into spending time and money on their voices in the fond hope of some day astonishing the world.

In the course of Lent the abbe introduced me to all the best dancers and operatic singers in Bologna, which is the nursery of the heroines of the stage.

Lakelands, music, public affairs, the pardonable foibles of friends created to amuse their fellows, operatic heroes and heroines, exhibitions of pictures, the sorrows of Crowned Heads, so serviceable ever to mankind as an admonition to the ambitious, a salve to the envious!

Exactly right, I felt, that we should enter into the House of Skulls in this operatic manner.

As it is, we have operatic versions of the first two of the comedies, Mozart's "Nozze di Figaro" being a sequel to Rossini's "Il Barbiere," its action beginning at a period not long after the precautions of Dr.

Fleetwood had given him the dispossessing shrug of the man out of the run, and the hint of the tip for winning, with the aid of operatic arias.

Patti and Melba, of the operatic stage, Bernhardt and Rejane and Duse of the theater.