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Prefigurement

   Also found in: Legal 0.01 sec.
pre·fig·ure  (pr-fgyr)
tr.v. pre·fig·ured, pre·fig·ur·ing, pre·fig·ures
1. To suggest, indicate, or represent by an antecedent form or model; presage or foreshadow: The paintings of Paul Cézanne prefigured the rise of cubism in the early 20th century.
2. To imagine or picture to oneself in advance.

[Middle English prefiguren, from Old French prefigurer, from Late Latin praefigrre : Latin prae-, pre- + Latin figrre, to shape (from figra, shape; see dheigh- in Indo-European roots).]

pre·figur·a·tive (-fgyr--tv) adj.
pre·figur·a·tive·ly adv.
pre·figure·ment n.


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The former position therefore justifies the liturgical practice of juxtaposing passages from the Old and New Testaments, given that the history of Israel before the time of Christ was a prefigurement of what was to come: "Now these things were written down for our instruction, upon whom the end of the ages has come" (1 Cor 10.
The article proposes that by such means and through its prefigurement of what Frank Kermode identifies in the work of modernists as the 'Romantic Image' Aylwin reveals the lines of a Romantic genealogy that extends from Coleridge through Rossetti to writers such as Yeats, demonstrating the hidden continuity between Romantic and late Victorian literature and mapping the crucial transition from late Victorian literature to literary modernism.
15) In these stories every punishment inflicted on Old Testament prefigurements of the messiah were also described as suffered by Jesus.
 
 
 
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