Associations to the word «Elegy»
Noun
- Ode
- Churchyard
- Sonnet
- Ovid
- Epitaph
- Lament
- Keats
- Stanza
- Orpheus
- Gray
- Poem
- Satire
- Shelley
- Dryden
- Tennyson
- Whitman
- Epistle
- Punk
- Eton
- Cello
- Epic
- Bard
- Poetry
- Muse
- Verse
- Goethe
- Poet
- Qu
- Milton
- Viola
- Ballad
- Pumpkin
- Osaka
- Funeral
- Bassoon
- Marlowe
- Hymn
- Caprice
- Masterpiece
- Walpole
- Soprano
- Eliot
- Waller
- Tragedy
- Chaucer
- Epilogue
- Praise
- Piano
- Orchestra
- Lullaby
- Goldsmith
- Tam
- Rhapsody
- Sampler
- Prelude
- Metamorphosis
- Graveyard
- Colored
- Tchaikovsky
- Shakespeare
- Authorship
- Clarinet
- Coleridge
- Meditation
- Liber
- Partridge
- Virgil
- Iain
- Inca
- Violin
- Chu
- Prologue
- Cornelia
Adjective
Wiktionary
ELEGY, noun. A mournful or plaintive poem; a funeral song; a poem of lamentation.
Dictionary definition
ELEGY, noun. A mournful poem; a lament for the dead.
Wise words
Every day we should hear at least one little song, read one
good poem, see one exquisite picture, and, if possible,
speak a few sensible words.