solennissimeo2o是什么意思思?

我老婆夜里头疼是什么意思,怎么解决?_育儿问答_宝宝树
我老婆夜里头疼是什么意思,怎么解决?
当时年龄:
还没有宝宝
来自:网页;
估计是没有好或头受风了,我也是这样的,不过休息好了以后第二天头就好了。
最佳回答者:
市场价:?49
是激素分泌造成的哦,我也痛过好一阵子
如果的话很难治的
偏头疼吗?神经的事要没怀孕吃点
头疼肯定是哪里不舒服啦 带她看看
可能是神经性的,到查查吧
非常多,感冒发热、五官有毛病、血压异常、头部有障碍、贫血、便秘、煤气中毒、酒精中毒、神经疲劳等都会引起头疼。 头疼可能是脑膜受到了刺激,血管收缩使张力增加引起的,也可能是脑部提醒我们氧气不足,需要更多氧气的信号。只要含着许多氧气的血液流入到疼痛的地方,头疼就会立刻消失。不过必须找到头疼是什么原因造成的,才能解决头疼的问题。
是不是感冒了呢?去吧
那就吧。。。。外面还有大片的森林。。。。
带他去给中医看看呀&&&要不拿炖鸽子试下
那你还不带你老婆好好检查一下,头疼可不是小事。的海词问答和网友补充:
相关词典网站:Biography: Andreini, Isabella
Andreini, Isabella ()
Born in Padua to Venetian parents in 1562, Isabella Andreini (n&e Canali) would become the most celebrated commedia dell'arte actress of her century by the time of her death in 1604. Praised by contemporaries such as Tasso, Marino, and Chiabrera and famed in France as well as Italy, Andreini was renowned both for the prima donna innamorata role she played on the stage and for the erudition she displayed in her written works. These included a pastoral play, a volume of poetry, a collection of Lettere, and a compilation of Fragmenti; the last two works published posthumously by her husband. Her verse was second only to that of Tasso in a poetic contest sponsored by Cardinal Giorgio Cinthio Aldobrandini in Rome and later described by one of her sons. She was one of few women to be admitted into a literary academy in Renaissance Italy: the Accademia degli Intenti of Pavia, which she joined with the name "Accesa." After her death at age forty-two, not only was Andreini's legacy felt in the realms of theater and literature, but a number of her madrigals and other poetic compositions were set to music (MacNeil 2003).
Little is known of Andreini's early years. In 1576, at age fourteen, she joined the Gelosi acting troupe in Bologna, which included Flaminio Scala, and began playing the role of the prima donna innamorata with which she would become so closely associated. After traveling to France with the Gelosi to perform for Henry III, she returned to Italy in 1578 where she married Francesco Andreini, fifteen years her senior and also a comedian with the Gelosi. The pair continued to act in commedia performances with Isabella playing the prima donna and Francesco her
soon Francesco added a comic role to his repertoire for which he would become famous, that of the braggart Captain Spavento. With Francesco now the director of the Gelosi, Isabella continued to perform and her fame to grow. Her signature piece, a tour de force called the Pazzia d'Isabella (The Madness of Isabella), generated accolades when she performed it in Florence on May 13, 1589, during the festivities for the wedding of Ferdinand de' Medici and Christine of Lorraine. The piece, which required Isabella to feign madness, play the parts of all the comedians in her troupe, male and female, and to speak in several languages, was described admiringly by one spectator, Giuseppe Pavoni, in his Diario. Pavoni exclaimed that Isabella's performance so awed her audience that her name would never be forgotten: "mentre durer& il mondo, sempre sar& lodata la sua bella eloquenza, & valore" ("as long as the world goes on, her beautiful eloquence and w" ctd. in MacNeil ). Isabella's virtuoso performance generated further excitement because it followed that of her rival in the Gelosi, the actress Vittoria Piisimi, who performed another play for the court on the preceding day.
Isabella occasionally performed with troupes other than the Gelosi, appearing with the Confidenti in Genoa in October 1589 and with the Uniti in 1601. In 1603-4, she traveled for a third time to France with the Gelosi, performing for the court of Henry IV at Fontainebleau and Paris. Pregnant with her eighth child, she miscarried during the trip back to Italy, and died in Lyon. Her passing was marked with a public funeral and a medallion was struck to commemorate her, her likeness on one side and an image of Fame on the other.
Isabella was an accomplished, versatile, and admired writer. By 1587, her verse had begun to circulate in poetic compilations. She followed the currents of orthodox literary culture but injected her works with the some of the proto-feminist commentary that inflected many texts produced in the climate of the sixteenth-century querelle des femmes, or debate over women. Her first published work was La Mirtilla, a pastoral play that appeared in 1588. The Mirtilla capitalized on Isabella's firsthand experience of the stage, re-writing a typical pastoral scenario with a pro-woman twist. In Isabella's hands, the nymph Filli does not succumb to the misogynist snares of the satyr, but rather turns the tables on him, thereby inverting and satirizing a standard element of pastoral literature (Ray 1997).
Andreini devoted the next decade to honing her reputation as an actress of impeccable skill and reputation. Only in 1601 did she publish her second work, a volume of Rime, which, like the Mirtilla, reflected the influence of her experience on the stage. Heavily inflected with the discourse of Petrarchism, Isabella's verse also demonstrates an awareness of the artificiality inherent in the literary as well as the dramatic process. The work's proemial sonnet cautions readers not to be taken in by the poet's artful naturalism, the product of her acting experience, warning, "S'Alcun fia mai, che i versi miei negletti /Legga, non creda & questi finti ardori, /Che ne le Scene imaginati amori /Usa
& trattar con non leali affetti ("If ever there is anyone who reads/ these my neglected poems, don't believe/in
/loves imagined in their scenes /I've handled with emotions false (MacNeil and Cook 2005, 31).
Also in 1601, Isabella signaled, in a letter to the humanist Erycius Puteanus, that she had undertaken a third literary project, a collection of letters. This work, the Lettere di Isabella Andreini padovana comica gelosa, was edited and published three years after Isabella's death by Francesco Andreini, with an apocryphal dedicatory letter composed by him under her name. Despite the title, the Lettere are, like Isabella's other works, a distinctly theatrical text. A series of dramatic monologues clearly derived from the on-stage discourse of commedia dell'arte's innamorati characters, these highly stylized compositions address all aspects of the love relationship, again with heavy doses of Petrarchism and neoplatonism. Most interestingly, these fictive missives are written in both male and female voices, echoing Isabella's skill for adopting a hermaphroditic persona as she did when performing the Pazzia. The Lettere met with great success and were reprinted more than a dozen times by the mid-seventeenth century. Francesco also collected a number of contrasti, or dialogues, that Isabella had created from her commedia dell'arte experience. These were published some years later in 1620, with the participation of Flaminio Scala, under the title Fragmenti di alcune scritture della Signora Isabella Andreini comica gelosa e academica intenta. Francesco Andreini's editing of his wife's work in both instances has been characterized as part of a larger project on the actor's part to preserve and promote not just the memory and legacy of his wife, but that of commedia dell'arte in general (Tessari 1989).
Isabella's contemporaries marveled at her ability to combine the beauty, modesty, and virtue thought to constitute ideal womanhood with her considerable skill as an actress and writer. Unlike some of her contemporaries, she seems to have inspired little, if any, hostility by her literary activity and she devoted much attention to establishing and maintaining her public image as a devoted mother and wife as well as a writer and actress (MacNeil 2003). Isabella was survived by her husband and their seven children. Her four daughters entered convents, one son a monastery, and another the ducal guard. The eldest son, Giovan Battista, followed in his parents' footsteps, playing the innamorato role in the Gelosi before going on to form a new troupe, the Fedeli. In addition to writing a number of works for the stage, Giovan Battista also dedicated a collection of poetry to his mother in 1606.
WORKS CITED
Andreini, Isabella. Fragmenti di alcune scritture della signora Isabella Andreini comica
gelosa, & academica intenta. Raccolti da Francesco Andreini comico geloso, detto il Capitan Spavento. E dati in luce da Flaminio Scala Comico. Venice: Combi, 1627.
---. Lettere d'Isabella Andreini padovana, comica gelosa. Venice: Marc'Antonio Zaltieri, 1607.
---. Mirtilla. Ed. Maria Luisa Doglio. Lucca: M. Pacini Fazzi, 1995.
---. Rime d'Isabella Andreini Padovana... Milan: Girolamo Bordone, 1611.
MacNeil, Anne. "The Divine Madness of Isabella Andreini." Journal of the Royal
Music Association 120 (1995): 195-215.
---. Music and Women of the Commedia dell'Arte in the Late Sixteenth Century.
Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2003.
---, ed. and James Wyatt Cook, trans. Selected Poems of Isabella Andreini. Trans. James Wyatt Cook. Lantham, MA: The Scarecrow Press, Inc, 2005.
Pavoni, Giuseppe. Diario descritto da Giuseppe Pavoni. Delle feste celebrate nelle
solennissime nozzi delli serenissimi sposi, il sig. Don Ferdinando Medici, & la sig. Donna Christina di Loreno gran duchi di Toscana... Bologna, 1589.
Ray, Meredith Kennedy. "La Castita Conquistata: The Function of the Satyr in Pastoral
Drama." Romance Languages Annual (1998): 312-21.
Tessari, Francesco. "Sotto il segno di Giano: La Commedia dell'Arte di Isabella e
Francesco Andreini."The Commedia dell'Arte From the Renaissance to Dario Fo, ed. Christopher Cairns, 1-33. Lampeter: Edwin Mellen Press, 1989.
SUGGESTIONS FOR FURTHER READING
Andreini, Isabella. La Mirtilla. Ed. and trans. Julie Campbell. Tempe, Arizona: Arizona Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies, 2002.
Andrews, Richard. "Isabella Andreini and Others: Women on Stage in the Late
Cinquecento." In Women in Italian Renaissance Culture and Society, ed. Letizia Panizza, 316-33. London: Legenda, 2005.
Bartoli, F.S. Notizie istoriche de' comici italiani che fiorirono intorno all'anno MDC fino ai giorni presenti. Padua, 1782; facsimile edition Bologna: Arnaldo Forni, 2 vols., 1978.
Baschet, Armand. Les com&diens italiens a la cour de France. Paris: E. Plon et C.ie,
Campbell, Julie D. Literary circles and gender in early modern Europe: a cross-cultural Approach. Aldershot, E
Burlington, VT: Ashgate, 2006.
Clubb, Louise Geoge. Italian Drama in Shakespeare's Time. New Haven: Yale
University Press, 1989.
---. "The State of the Arte in the Andreini's Time." In Studies in the Italian Renaissance:
Essays in Memory of Arnolfo B. Ferruolo, ed.Gian Paolo Biasin et al., 263-281. Naples: Societ& editrice napoletana, 1985.
Costa-Zalessow, Natalia. Scrittrici italiane dal XIII al XX secolo. Ravenna, 1982.
Dersofi, Nancy. "Isabella Andreini ()." In Italian Women Writers: A Bio-Bibliographical Sourcebook, ed. Rinaldina Russell,
18-25. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1994.
Erenstein, Robert L. "Isabella Andreini: A Lady of Virtue and High Renown." In Essays on Drama and Theatre: Liber amicorum Benjamin Hunnigher, 37-49. Amsterdam: Moussalt's Uitgeverij, 1973.
Fiocco, Achille. "Isabella Andreini." In Enciclopedia dello spettacolo, I: 555-58. Rome, 1954.
Fondi, Giovanni Malquori. "De la "lettre-canevas" & la "pi&ce de cabinet: les Lettere d'Isabella Andreini, tr&duites par Francois de Grenaille." In Contacts culturels et &changes linguistiques au XVIIe si&cle en France: actes du 3e Colloque du Centre international de rencotres sur le XViie si&cle, Univesit& de Fribourg (Suisse) 1996, 125-45. Paris and Seattle: Papers on French Seventeenth-Century Literature: 1997.
Kerr, Rosalind.
"Isabella Andreini, Comica Gelosa : Petrarchism for the
Theatre Public Theatre." Quaderni d'Italianistica
27.2 (2006): 71-92.
MacNeil, Anne.
"The Virtue of Gender." In La femme lettr&e a la Renaissance, ed. Michel Bastianesen, 147-64. Louvain, Belgium: Poetas, 1997.
Marotti, F. and G. Romei. La Commedia dell'Arte e la societ& barocca. La professione del teatro. Rome: Bulzoni, 1991.
Molinari, Cesare. "L'altra faccia del 1589: Isabella Andreini e la sua 'pazzia.'" In Firenze e la Toscana dei Medici nell'Europa del Cinquecento (Florence: Olschki, 1983), vol. II, 565-73 .
Panella, L. "Isabella Canali." In Dizionario biografico degli italiani, 704-5. Rome: Istituto della Enciclopedia Italiana, 1960-.
Taviani, Ferdinando. "Bella d'Asia. Torquato Tasso, gli attori e l'immortalita." In
Paragone/Letteratura XXXV (1984): 3-76.
--- and M. Schino. Il segreto della Commedia dell'Arte. La memoria delle compagnie
italiane del XVI, XVII, e XVIII secolo. Florence: La Casa Usher, 1982.
Submitted by Meredith Kennedy Ray, University of Delaware, 2008
Produced by the University of Chicago Library.
Send questions or comments about IWW to
PhiloLogic Software, Copyright & 2001 The University of Chicago.
PhiloLogic is a registered trademark of The University of Chicago.solennissime是什么意思?_百度知道
solennissime是什么意思?
您的回答被采纳后将获得:
系统奖励20(财富值+经验值)+难题奖励20(财富值+经验值)
我有更好的答案
一本书的名字
其他类似问题
为您推荐:
等待您来回答
下载知道APP
随时随地咨询
出门在外也不愁}

我要回帖

更多关于 狗带是什么意思 的文章

更多推荐

版权声明:文章内容来源于网络,版权归原作者所有,如有侵权请点击这里与我们联系,我们将及时删除。

点击添加站长微信