0 describing things in a way that makes them sound more exciting or mysterious than they really are --
1 a style of art, music, and literature, popular in Europe in the late 18th and early 19th centuries, that deals with the beauty of nature and human emotions --
Rather, they might be viewed as an extension of romanticism, a desire for the unknown, the exciting, and the sublime.
But is there a reverse side to this obvious romanticism.
The second column are these amounts plus the parameter estimates for expectations of good weather, diving and romanticism.
In societies recently transformed by rural-urban migration, hopes, desires, and fantasies are resolutely urbane; there is little scope for ruraloriented romanticism.
It has been the backdrop for many black/white photographs of industrial romanticism: pollution, ruins and decay.
Such sartorial romanticism, verging on circus costume or military display, was frowned upon by the smart set.
Romanticism's notion of originality, in my view, mystified the notion of fame by substituting a cultural criterion for the economic one.
Periods of romanticism favoured the particular in local and national histories while periods of rationalism favoured generalizing interpretations, often on a larger scale.