These critical coteries Horace treats, as Catullus treats his 'vile poets, pests of the age,' and as Pope treated Dennis and the other poetasters of his time.
There could have been no incident better calculated than this to create a sensation in the coteries of Paris.
There is perhaps no more striking type of the character and condition of the Parisian coteries than one of Hume's most intimate friends, Madame Geoffrin.
I am thinking of separating him from all his coterieswithout any one being able to find fault with the proceeding.
Thus the little world of ship-board went on from day to day, gradually settling down into little coteries as like-minded men and women began to find each other out.
Royal societies are no where much better than coteries of old wives; and, judging from their recent pursuits, that of the Athens can form no exception to the general character.
Economic and social questions are discussed and settled amicably among the ruling coteries and do not as in Europe and North America form the basis for the organisation of political parties.
He had been the centre of a brilliant set at Cambridge, one of those coteries whose fame, if they are brilliant and vivacious enough and have enough self-confidence, penetrates to the outer world before they leave the University.
In the meantime its popularity and its assured position were beginning to be assailed in the coteries by the work of two new poets.
The Literary Coteries Of Paris In The Eighteenth Century.
An account of these coteries may be seen in Schlosser’s Hist.
I did not regard it as my office to point out at that moment that what the Emperor characterized as public opinion was only the artificial product of certain ambitious coteries of the French press, with a very narrow political horizon.
The workers thus selected would not be in any sense representative of what is popularly called 'the average run of workers;' they would represent nothing but the little coteries to which they belonged.
And those choices are presented by the energetic coteries who hustle about with petitions and round up the delegates.
As I conceived my usual societies and coteries could not approve my attendance at the house of such a personage, I was intent upon sending an apology to Madame Real.
And I delighted in Victor Hugo’s book upon Shakespeare, because he abused critics and coteries and thought that Shakespeare wrote without care or premeditation and to please everybody.
The prospect of an Austrian re-conquest had caused no less concern to the friends of liberty in the peninsula than joy to the reactionary coteries of the old sovereigns.
In reality Fortune never favoured him more than when she removed him from the coteries of intriguing Corsicans on the coast of Provence and brought him to the centre of all influence.
The provincial coteries of which we speak, were usually centres of the best and most intelligent society of their neighbourhoods, and were for the most part distinguished by an active and liberal spirit of inquiry.
In all clever coteries of which we have any genial record, there usually figures a lawyer, as a wit, a boon companion, an entertaining dogmatist, or an intellectual champion.
Our plays, our novels, our essays, are mosaics of reflections on the very things that interested the courts and coteries of the Renaissance.
At the age of seventeen he was already a ripe scholar, versed in the critical questions which then agitated learned coteries in Italy.
Hence the biographer's determination to misdescribe and manipulate the document, so that, whilst accepted in the coteries for what it was (viz.
Of all the numerous acquaintances she made in the coteries of Philosophic Radicalism, the three persons to influence Mary Wollstonecraft most powerfully and enduringly were Thomas Paine, Henry Fuseli, and William Godwin.
Whilst the Genevese coteries were saying evil things of Shelley and Byron, each of the poets knew the worst of the many bad things said about them in those cliques.
Some of these coteries will in exceptional cases become creative and begin to express their habitation and name.
Some of the higher forms of the Intimate Moving Picture play should be endowed by local coteries representing their particular region.
The people seemed not to fear Napoleon, as he was feared in Germany: the old revolutionary party was still active and might easily become far more dangerous than the royalist coteries of the Boulevard St. Germain.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "coteries" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.