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Definition of Intertextual
1. Adjective. Pertaining to intertextuality; being or involving the reference of one text by another. ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Intertextual
1. [adj]
Lexicographical Neighbors of Intertextual
Literary usage of Intertextual
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Occitan Translations of John XII and XIII-XVII from a Fourteenth-century by Marvyn Roy Harris (1985)
"A. intertextual COMPARISONS 1). ASSISI AND BARCELONA VERSIONS (JOHN XII-XIV:23)
The evidence from Text I for a common ancestry of the segments in question ..."
2. The Translator as Intercultural Mediator by Eleonora Federici (2006)
"The literary world to be translated might have already been mapped by other
translators and thus possess intertextual references to be recovered for the ..."
3. Secreted Desires: The Major Uranians by Michael Matthew Kaylor (2006)
"By exercising a prurient revisionism, he produces an intertextual allusion ...
this simple change displays, an overarching command of intertextual nuance. ..."
4. Read It Again!: Revisiting Shared Reading by Brenda Parkes (2000)
"It provides many opportunities for children to use prior knowledge through picture
clues, language clues, print clues, and intertextual clues. ..."
5. Passive Tranquility: The Sculpture of Filippo Della Valle by Vernon Hyde Minor (1997)
"But rather than say that the art of this period is unoriginal, we can comment
instead that it is replete with intertextual significance, ..."
6. Archaeology of Houses and Households in Ancient Creteby Kevin Glowacki, Natalia Vogeikoff-Brogan by Kevin Glowacki, Natalia Vogeikoff-Brogan (2008)
"This strategy can be related to the intertextual mode Barchiesi 1993 calls "future
reflexive." For the occasional representations of the infant Artemis in ..."