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Definitions

quarto

[kwawr-toh] / ˈkwɔr toʊ /


Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

Or the notion that McCartney might very well have gleaned the phrase "let it be" from Shakespeare's "Hamlet" — but mercifully, not from the bad quarto, it turns out.

From Salon • Nov. 1, 2021

ESCADA, Brasil — Não se avistava viva alma na rua estreita e empoeirada, a não ser um gato que se esgueirava sob uma lua quarto minguante.

From New York Times • Mar. 14, 2017

Most editors of “Hamlet,” for instance, silently translate “porpentine” to “porcupine” without incurring outrage, though whether the porcupine is “fretful” or “fearful” depends on whether you follow the folio or the second quarto.

From The New Yorker • Oct. 6, 2015

While with plays such as Hamlet, Othello and King Lear we can compare the Folio against the quarto, for other plays – such as Antony and Cleopatra, The Tempest and Macbeth – we cannot.

From The Guardian • Jul. 12, 2013

Mr. Bowles became a poet in print in his twenty-seventh year—publishing in 1789 a very small volume in quarto, with the very modest title of "Fourteen Sonnets."

From Harper's New Monthly Magazine, Vol. 1. No 1, June 1850 by Various




Vocabulary lists containing quarto