120 results for: essay

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Dictionary Entries (8 more entries. View all »)
Dictionary.com Unabridged (v 1.1)Cite This Source
es·say    Audio Help   [n. es-ey for 1, 2; es-ey, e-sey for 3–5; v. e-sey] Pronunciation Key
–noun
1.a short literary composition on a particular theme or subject, usually in prose and generally analytic, speculative, or interpretative.
2.anything resembling such a composition: a picture essay.
3.an effort to perform or accomplish something; attempt.
4.Philately. a design for a proposed stamp differing in any way from the design of the stamp as issued.
5.Obsolete. a tentative effort; trial; assay.
–verb (used with object)
6.to try; attempt.
7.to put to the test; make trial of.

[Origin: 1475–85; < MF essayer, c. AF assayer to assay < LL exagium a weighing, equiv. to *exag(ere), for L exigere to examine, test, lit., to drive out (see exact) + -ium -ium]

es·say·er, noun
Dictionary.com Unabridged (v 1.1)
Based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2006.

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Thesaurus Entries (4 more entries. View all »)
  Synonym Collection v1.1Cite This Source
Main Entry:  essay
Part of Speech:  noun
Synonyms:  article, attempt, discourse, disquisition, dissertation, effort, endeavor, exegesis, thesis, treatise, trial, belles lettres, festschrift
Source:  Synonym Collection v1.1
Copyright © 2008 by Lexico Publishing Group, LLC.
  Synonym Collection v1.1Cite This Source
Main Entry:  essay
Part of Speech:  verb
Synonyms:  article, composition, critique, dissertation, endeavor, exposition, narrative, paper, piece, story, theme, thesis, treatise, writing, editorial
Source:  Synonym Collection v1.1
Copyright © 2008 by Lexico Publishing Group, LLC.
  Roget's II: The New ThesaurusCite This Source
Main Entry:  attempt
Part of Speech:  noun
Definition:  A trying to do or make something.
Synonyms:  crack, effort, endeavor, go, offer, stab, trial, try
Source:  Roget's II: The New Thesaurus, Third Edition
by the Editors of the American Heritage® Dictionary.
Copyright © 2003, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.
Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved.

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Encyclopedia Articles (103 more entries. View all »)
Columbia Electronic EncyclopediaCite This Source


essay, relatively short literary composition in prose, in which a writer discusses a topic, usually restricted in scope, or tries to persuade the reader to accept a particular point of view. Although such classical authors as Theophrastus, Cicero, Marcus Aurelius, and Plutarch wrote essays, the term essai was first applied to the form in 1580 by Montaigne, one of the greatest essayists of all time, to his pieces on friendship, love, death, and morality. In England the term was inaugurated in 1597 by Francis Bacon, who wrote shrewd meditations on civil and moral wisdom. Montaigne and Bacon, in fact, illustrate the two distinct kinds of essay—the informal and the formal. The informal essay is personal, intimate, relaxed, conversational, and frequently humorous. Some of the greatest exponents of the informal essay are Jonathan Swift, Charles Lamb, William Hazlitt, Thomas De Quincey, Mark Twain, James Thurber, and E. B. White. The formal essay is dogmatic, impersonal, systematic, and expository. Significant writers of this type include Joseph Addison, Samuel Johnson, Matthew Arnold, John Stuart Mill, J. H. Newman, Walter Pater, Ralph Waldo Emerson, and Henry David Thoreau. In the latter half of the 20th cent. the formal essay has become more diversified in subject and less stately in tone and language, and the sharp division between the two forms has tended to disappear.

See studies by L. Fiedler, ed. (2d ed. 1969), C. Sanders et al. (1970), A. J. Butrym, ed. (1990).

The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia Copyright © 2004, Columbia University Press.
Licensed from Columbia University Press


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