Associations to the word «Dryden»
Noun
- Chaucer
- Virgil
- Satire
- Addison
- Ovid
- Prologue
- Plutarch
- Ode
- Preface
- Milton
- Ken
- Waller
- Epilogue
- Purcell
- Laureate
- Nasa
- Hind
- Wordsworth
- Dramatist
- Erasmus
- Shakespeare
- Coleridge
- Goaltender
- Elegy
- Swift
- Prose
- Pope
- Tempest
- Granada
- Buckingham
- Dedication
- Spencer
- Poet
- Tragedy
- Rochester
- Censure
- Northamptonshire
- Verse
- Cleopatra
- Covent
- Malone
- Dorset
- Wit
- Epistle
- Fable
- Ridicule
- Admirer
- Poem
- Voltaire
- Monmouth
- Poetry
- Beaumont
- Boswell
- Rhyme
- Guise
- Translation
- Ames
- Homer
- Restoration
- Antony
- Rehearsal
- Cromwell
- Genius
- Essay
- Iliad
- Dogs
- Konrad
- Horace
- Rae
- Muse
- Cecilia
- Libretto
- Nathaniel
- Playwright
- Contemporary
- Tate
- Eastman
- Panther
- Airplane
- Cor
Adjective
Adverb
Wiktionary
DRYDEN, proper noun. A surname derived from place names in England, from words for "dry valley".
DRYDEN, proper noun. John Dryden, English poet and playwright
DRYDEN, proper noun. A village in Michigan
DRYDEN, proper noun. A town and village in New York
DRYDEN, proper noun. A city in Ontario
DRYDEN, proper noun. An unincorporated community in Oregon
DRYDEN, proper noun. An unincorporated community in Texas
DRYDEN, proper noun. A CDP in Virginia
DRYDEN, proper noun. An unincorporated community in Washington
Dictionary definition
DRYDEN, noun. The outstanding poet and dramatist of the Restoration (1631-1700).
Wise words
He who speaks without modesty will find it difficult to make
his words good.