definição e significado de Trilogy | sensagent.com


   Publicitade E▼


 » 
alemão búlgaro chinês croata dinamarquês eslovaco esloveno espanhol estoniano farsi finlandês francês grego hebraico hindi holandês húngaro indonésio inglês islandês italiano japonês korean letão língua árabe lituano malgaxe norueguês polonês português romeno russo sérvio sueco tailandês tcheco turco vietnamês
alemão búlgaro chinês croata dinamarquês eslovaco esloveno espanhol estoniano farsi finlandês francês grego hebraico hindi holandês húngaro indonésio inglês islandês italiano japonês korean letão língua árabe lituano malgaxe norueguês polonês português romeno russo sérvio sueco tailandês tcheco turco vietnamês

Definição e significado de Trilogy

Definição

trilogy (n.)

1.a set of three literary or dramatic works related in subject or theme

   Publicidade ▼

Merriam Webster

TrilogyTril"o*gy (?), n. [Gr. trilogi`a; pref. tri- (see Tri-) + lo`gos speech, discourse: cf. F. trilogie.] A series of three dramas which, although each of them is in one sense complete, have a close mutual relation, and form one historical and poetical picture. Shakespeare's “ Henry VI.” is an example.

On the Greek stage, a drama, or acted story, consisted in reality of three dramas, called together a trilogy, and performed consecutively in the course of one day. Coleridge.

   Publicidade ▼

Definiciones (más)

definição - Wikipedia

Sinónimos

trilogy (n.)

threesome, triplet

Locuções

A Love Trilogy • Abhorsen trilogy • Alien Trilogy • Amara (Stone trilogy) • Amber Trilogy • Apocalypse Trilogy • Aquasilva Trilogy • Auton trilogy • BRD Trilogy • Bartimaeus Trilogy • Berlin Trilogy • Black Society Trilogy • Black Triad trilogy • Bourne Trilogy • Boyce trilogy • Bromeliad Trilogy • Bum trilogy • Cairo Trilogy • Calcutta trilogy • Canadian Railroad Trilogy • Characters in the gameworld trilogy • Characters of the Bartimaeus Trilogy • Characters of the Night's Dawn trilogy • Christ Clone Trilogy • Circle Trilogy • Coldfire Trilogy • Complications – Trilogy of Intricacy • Condor Trilogy • Conquerors' Trilogy • Cumbrian Trilogy • Cybertron (Unicron Trilogy) • Danzig Trilogy • Dark Visions Trilogy • Deepwater trilogy • Die Hard Trilogy • Ditch Trilogy • Dollars Trilogy • Dragon Mountain (Sovereign Stone trilogy) • E-Branch Trilogy • Eclipse Trilogy • Elements trilogy • Empire Trilogy • Engines of Light Trilogy • Eugene trilogy • Europa trilogy • Farseer Trilogy • Film trilogy • Fleabag Trilogy • Forbidden Borders trilogy • Gaea trilogy • Gamearth Trilogy • Giant's Trilogy • Giants Trilogy • Gorse Trilogy • Grigori Trilogy • Groups in the Gameworld Trilogy • Guardians of Time Trilogy • Inkheart trilogy • Jango (Noble Warriors Trilogy) • Knightfall Trilogy • Koker trilogy • List of Guardians of Time Trilogy characters • List of Guardians of Time Trilogy powers • List of Guardians of Time Trilogy realms • List of original characters in The Lord of the Rings film trilogy • Lloyd Hopkins Trilogy • Lord of the Rings the Motion Picture Trilogy the Exhibition • Lord of the Rings trilogy • Lyonesse Trilogy • Magic in the Bartimaeus Trilogy • Man with No Name Trilogy • Man with No Name trilogy • Manifold Trilogy • Marathon Trilogy • Mars trilogy • Mask Trilogy • Maztica Trilogy • Megatron (Unicron Trilogy) • Metal Trilogy • Mexico Trilogy • Midnighters Trilogy • Minor characters in the House of Cards trilogy • Moonlight Bay Trilogy • NASA Trilogy • Night's Dawn Trilogy • Noman (Noble Warriors Trilogy) • North and South (trilogy) • Old Kingdom trilogy • One Man Star Wars Trilogy • Optimus Prime (Unicron Trilogy) • Original Shannara Trilogy • Persian Trilogy • Planets and habitats of the Night's Dawn trilogy • Prehysteria trilogy • Principal photography of The Lord of the Rings film trilogy • Production design of The Lord of the Rings film trilogy • Pusher trilogy • Quintaglio Ascension Trilogy • Regeneration Trilogy • Ring Trilogy • Road Movie Trilogy • Robot Romance Trilogy • Roto trilogy • Schrödinger's Cat trilogy • Secret trilogy • Seeker (Noble Warriors Trilogy) • Sherston trilogy • Silicon Dreams trilogy • Soldier Son Trilogy • Solitude Trilogy • Songs from the Trilogy • Special effects of The Lord of the Rings film trilogy • Sprawl trilogy • Stadium House Trilogy • Star Wars Trilogy (pinball) • Star Wars Trilogy Arcade • Star Wars sequel trilogy • Stars and Stripes trilogy • Starscream (Unicron Trilogy) • Technology in the Night's Dawn trilogy • Teenage Apocalypse Trilogy • The Apu Trilogy • The Barrytown Trilogy • The Brentford Trilogy • The Bromeliad Trilogy • The City Book Trilogy • The Corellian Trilogy • The Crane's View Trilogy • The Crucible (trilogy) • The Damned Trilogy • The Dark Nest trilogy • The Darkangel Trilogy • The Deptford Trilogy • The Doomspell Trilogy • The Door Within Trilogy • The Empire Trilogy • The Firebringer Trilogy • The Foundation Trilogy (BBC Radio) • The Guild of Specialists trilogy • The Han Solo Trilogy • The Harper Hall Trilogy • The Hollow Kingdom Trilogy • The Hunter's Blades Trilogy • The Icewind Dale Trilogy • The Illuminatus! Trilogy • The Jade Trilogy • The Jedi Academy trilogy • The Karnstein Trilogy • The Knight Templar (Crusades trilogy) • The Knightfall Trilogy • The Knights of Myth Drannor Trilogy • The Lord of the Rings film trilogy • The Magician Trilogy • The Mammoth Trilogy • The Man with No Name Trilogy • The Mayflower Trilogy • The New York Trilogy • The Night's Dawn Trilogy • The Nikopol Trilogy • The Nova Trilogy • The Obsidian Trilogy • The Orphic Trilogy • The Pit Dragon Trilogy • The Sabata Trilogy • The Salterton Trilogy • The Sevenwaters Trilogy • The Space Trilogy • The Stadium House Trilogy • The Swords Trilogy • The Thor Trilogy • The Three Colors Trilogy • The Trilogy • The Trilogy (album) • The Trilogy Vinyl • The Wimbledon Trilogy • Three Californias Trilogy • Toldi trilogy • Tom Clancy's Classic Trilogy • Torch Song Trilogy • Triad Society trilogy • Trilogy (ATB album) • Trilogy (ELP album) • Trilogy (Enigma album) • Trilogy (disambiguation) • Trilogy Productions • Trilogy Systems • Trilogy of Faith • Trilogy of Fallot • Trilogy of Terror • Trilogy of Terror (Blind Illusion album) • Trilogy of Terror II • Ultimate Galactus Trilogy • Undersea Trilogy • Underworld USA Trilogy • Unicron Trilogy • VALIS trilogy • Viking Trilogy • Void Trilogy • Zimiamvian Trilogy

Dicionario analógico

Wikipedia

Trilogy

                   

A trilogy is a set of three works of art that are connected, and that can be seen either as a single work or as three individual works. They are commonly found in literature, film, or video games. Three-part works that are considered components of a larger work also exist in visual arts and music, such as the triptych or the three-movement sonata, but they are not commonly referred to with the term "trilogy."

Most trilogies are works of fiction involving the same characters or setting, such as The Deptford Trilogy of novels by Robertson Davies or The Godfather films of Francis Ford Coppola. Others are connected only by theme: for example, each film of Krzysztof Kieślowski's Three Colors trilogy explores one of the political ideals of the French Republic (liberty, equality, fraternity) and each novel in Paul Auster's The New York Trilogy uses formats from detective fiction to explore existential questions. Trilogies can also be connected in less obvious ways, such as The Nova Trilogy of novels by William S. Burroughs, each written using Brion Gysin's cut-up technique.

Occasionally, the term is applied to music, such as the Berlin Trilogy of David Bowie, linked together by their musical sound and lyrical themes, and the fact that part of them was recorded in Berlin, Germany.

Trilogies — and series in general — are common in science fiction and fantasy.

Contents

  History

Trilogies date back to ancient times. In the Dionysia festivals of ancient Greece, for example, trilogies of plays were performed followed by a fourth satyr play. The Oresteia is the only surviving trilogy of these ancient Greek plays, originally performed at the festival in Athens in 458 BC. The three Theban plays, or Oedipus cycle, by Sophocles, originating in 5th century BC, is not a true example of a trilogy because the plays were written at separate times and with different themes/purposes.

In ancient India, an example of an early trilogy includes the epic Mahabharata, which originally consisted of three portions. Vyasa's original core portion of the epic was the Jaya. Vaisampayana's Bharata expanded on the story, with Vyasa's Jaya embedded within it. Ugrasrava eventually composed the Mahabharata, with both Vyasa's Jaya and Vaisampayana's Bharata embedded within the epic.

Richard Wagner's epic series of operas, Der Ring des Nibelungen, is sometimes referred to as a trilogy even though it consists of four works: Das Rheingold, Die Walküre, Siegfried, and Götterdämmerung. The first work, Das Rheingold, is shorter than the other three, running a bit over 3 hours, while all the others are over five. Performances of The Ring are often billed as three nights plus a prelude.

Technical changes in printing and film in the mid to late 20th century made the creation of trilogies more feasible, while the development of mass media and modern global distribution networks has made them more likely to be lucrative.

  Adding works to an existing trilogy

Creators of trilogies may later add more works. In such a case, the original three works may or may not keep the title "trilogy".

By contrast, The Foundation Series by Isaac Asimov originally consisted of Foundation, Foundation and Empire and Second Foundation and was considered a trilogy. Asimov wrote several more Foundation books and retroactively incorporated many of his other works into the continuity of the series. Despite this, the first three books are still considered a trilogy because they contain a story that is self-contained. Further complicating the matter, the Foundation series was originally eight short stories and novelettes written for science fiction magazines; its division into three books is more or less incidental.

The first three novels in The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy series were dubbed a trilogy, and even after he extended the series, author Douglas Adams continued to use the term for humorous effect - for example, calling Mostly Harmless "the fifth book in the increasingly inaccurately named trilogy."

The six Star Wars films are generally separated into two trilogies; the "original trilogy" (the three films released between 1977 and 1983) and the "prequel trilogy" (the three films released between 1999 and 2005, which take place before the original three films).

  Unofficial or mistaken trilogies

Sometimes a trio of works is known as a trilogy because of its creator. For example, before Quentin Tarantino's fourth film was released, his films Reservoir Dogs, Pulp Fiction, and Jackie Brown were sometimes referred to as "the Quentin Tarantino trilogy", although the stories of the three films hardly interconnected.

Three works with similar themes from a creator may later come to be known as a trilogy, especially if produced one after the other. The Steven Spielberg films A.I.: Artificial Intelligence, Minority Report, and Catch Me If You Can are unofficially known as "the running man trilogy", because each featured a main character escaping a pursuer. Terry Gilliam has dubbed his films Time Bandits, Brazil and The Adventures of Baron Munchausen as "The Imagination Trilogy", in that each movie has to do with the imagination of humans in the three stages of life: child, man, older man. Another example is the Dollars Trilogy by Sergio Leone; no continuity between the three movies was intended by Leone, but American marketers advertised the Clint Eastwood character in each film as being the same "Man with No Name".

One of the most popular "trilogies" of fantasy books, The Lord of the Rings by J. R. R. Tolkien, is not a trilogy, though it is often referred to as such. Tolkien regarded it as a single work and divided it into a prologue, six books, and five appendices. Because of post-World War II paper shortages, it was originally published in three volumes. It is still most commonly sold as three volumes, but has also been published in one-volume and seven-volume editions (six books and the appendices).

Occasionally, more than three works are planned but never finished. The Gormenghast fantasy trilogy is a trilogy by default, as author Mervyn Peake planned to write more novels set in that fictional world until his health failed.

In contrast, some works that were originally intended to be trilogies have been reclassified due to subsequent additions. George R. R. Martin's A Song of Ice and Fire series was originally planned as a trilogy, but has already expanded to five published novels with another two planned. Christopher Paolini changed the name of his "The Inheritance Trilogy" to The Inheritance Cycle, having announced that he would be writing a fourth book.

In some cases, a work is retroactively named a trilogy instead of having been designed as such by the authors, particularly if it is a story arc of a continuously running series such a comic book or television show. This might be due to a vaguely recurring or coincidental theme in each installment. One example is issues 48, 49, and 50 of the original Fantastic Four comic book which are notable for introducing the characters of Galactus and Silver Surfer. These are now commonly known as the Galactus Trilogy although the term wasn't used in the original issues.

In the modern era of home video, story arcs from a long-running television series might be packaged as a trilogy boxset even if they weren't presented as such in the original broadcast. The so-called E-Space Trilogy of Doctor Who includes the stories Full Circle, State of Decay, and Warriors Gate. Other than being consecutive stories set in E-Space, the three stories are self contained.

  Other numbered series

Words to describe sets of another number of works of art other than three are sometimes created by following the Greek etymology of "trilogy". Using the Greek numerical prefixes, these would be as follows for series with between two and ten entries:

Number in series Word (Greek) Word (variation)
2 no Greek equivalent. "Duology" (formed by mixing Latin (duo, "two") with Ancient Greek λόγος (logos, "speech", "account", "story")) has been used in some pairs of genre fiction novels.[1]
3 Trilogy
4 Tetralogy "Quadrilogy" (formed by mixing Latin (quad, "four") with Ancient Greek λόγος (logos, "speech", "account", "story")) has been used to describe certain film series.[2]
5 Pentalogy
6 Hexalogy
7 Heptalogy
8 Octalogy
9 Ennealogy
10 Decalogy

  See also

  Notes


   
               

 

todas as traduções do Trilogy


Conteùdo de sensagent

  • definição
  • sinónimos
  • antónimos
  • enciclopédia

 

4833 visitantes em linha

calculado em 0,032s