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Etymologies
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Examples
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Her "Flamenca," a loose take on flamenco dancing, is a solo piece, danced by Audra Atkinson, and set to music by Colorado Latin-lounge band Cabaret Diosa.
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The _Filostrato_ of Boccaccio is a story of light love, not much more substantial, except in its new poetical language, than the story of _Flamenca_.
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_Flamenca_; still abstract in its personages, still sentimental, but wholly unlike _Flamenca_ in the tragic stress of its sentiment and in the pathos of its incidents.
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_Flamenca_, an appropriation of Ovid -- disappearance of romantic mythology 361
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Provençal story of _Flamenca_, [88] a work in which the form of the novel is completely disengaged from the unnecessary accidents of romance, and reaches a kind of positive and modern clearness very much at variance in some respects with popular ideas of what is medieval.
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_Flores et Blanchefleur_, romance, referred to in _Flamenca_, 361; translated by Boccaccio (_Filocolo_), 364
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_Flamenca_, is really the triumph of Ovid, with the _Art of Love_, over all his
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The Romance of the medieval Romantic School attains one of its highest and most distinctive points in _Flamenca_, and shows what it had been aiming at from the beginning -- namely, the expression in an elegant manner of the ideas of the _Art of Love_, as understood in the polite society of those times.
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Many things are wanting to _Flamenca_ which it did not suit the author to bring in.
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_Flamenca_, a Provençal romance, by a follower of Chrestien de Troyes, in the spirit of Ovid, 359-362; romances named in, 360, 384-387
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