clásico
adj.
classic, vintage; classical
clásico (m)
n.
classic, creation that serves as an example to be followed (outstanding piece of art, excellent book, etc.); something worth remembering; something traditional
clásico2
2 = classic, classical, vintage, conventional, classicising [classicizing, -USA], classicised [classicized, -USA], vintage.
Ex: The classic and well-known example of such a distinction is that which is frequently found in libraries where books are arranged in separate sequences according to their size; for example, octavo, quarto and folio.
Ex: Music, especially classical works, often requires the establishment of a uniform title.
Ex: Indeed, advantage was taken of the tenth anniversary of British membership to make 1983 a vintage year for monographs on the European Communities.
Ex: The foregoing discussion concerning analytical entries assumes implicitly a conventional catalogue format, that is, card, microform or other printed catalogue.
Ex: By modelling her portraits on ancient Roman busts, she was responding to cultural and political forces which fostered a classicizing style.
Ex: His Cubist still lifes with figures rendered in a sketchily classicized style echoes the conflict between the academic and the avant-garde in the early 20th century.
Ex: When she discovered vintage comics and their lurid covers, she went nuts.
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* a imitación de lo clásico = classicising [classicizing, -USA], classicised [classicized, -USA].
* arquitectura clásica = classical architecture.
* ejemplo clásico = classical example.
* época clásica, la = classical age, the.
* imitando a lo clásico = classicising [classicizing, -USA], classicised [classicized, -USA].
* latín clásico = Classical Latin.
* literatura clásica = classical literature.
* mundo clásico, el = classical world, the.
* neoclásico = neoclassical [neo-classical].
* obra anónima clásica = anonymous classic.
* texto clásico = classical text.