Associations to the word «Dryden»
Noun
- Chaucer
- Virgil
- Satire
- Addison
- Ovid
- Prologue
- Plutarch
- Ode
- Preface
- Milton
- Ken
- Waller
- Epilogue
- Purcell
- Laureate
- Nasa
- Hind
- Wordsworth
- Dramatist
- Erasmus
- Shakespeare
- Coleridge
- Goaltender
- Elegy
- Swift
- Prose
- Pope
- Tempest
- Granada
- Buckingham
- Dedication
- Spencer
- Poet
- Tragedy
- Rochester
- Censure
- Northamptonshire
- Verse
- Cleopatra
- Covent
- Malone
- Dorset
- Wit
- Epistle
- Fable
- Ridicule
- Admirer
- Poem
- Voltaire
- Monmouth
- Poetry
- Beaumont
- Boswell
- Rhyme
- Guise
- Translation
- Ames
- Homer
- Restoration
- Antony
- Rehearsal
- Cromwell
- Genius
- Essay
- Iliad
- Dogs
- Konrad
- Horace
- Rae
- Muse
- Cecilia
- Libretto
- Nathaniel
- Playwright
- Contemporary
- Tate
- Eastman
- Panther
- Airplane
- Cor
Adjective
Adverb
Wiktionary
DRYDEN, proper noun. A surname derived from place names in England, from words for "dry valley".
DRYDEN, proper noun. John Dryden, English poet and playwright
DRYDEN, proper noun. A village in Michigan
DRYDEN, proper noun. A town and village in New York
DRYDEN, proper noun. A city in Ontario
DRYDEN, proper noun. An unincorporated community in Oregon
DRYDEN, proper noun. An unincorporated community in Texas
DRYDEN, proper noun. A CDP in Virginia
DRYDEN, proper noun. An unincorporated community in Washington
Dictionary definition
DRYDEN, noun. The outstanding poet and dramatist of the Restoration (1631-1700).
Wise words
Occasionally in life there are those moments of unutterable
fulfillment which cannot be completely explained by those
symbols called words. Their meanings can only be articulated
by the inaudible language of the heart.