Romance

Romance or romantic usually refers to romance (love), love emphasizing emotion over libido. It may also refer to:

Genres

  • Hellenistic romance, or Ancient Greek romance, a modern term for the genre of the five surviving Ancient Greek novels
  • Chivalric Romance, a genre of medieval and Renaissance narrative fiction
  • Romance (music), a type of ballad or lyrical song
    • Romancero, the corpus of such Spanish ballads, or a collection of them
    • Romance (meter), a metric pattern found in Spanish ballads
  • Romancero, the corpus of such Spanish ballads, or a collection of them
  • Romance (meter), a metric pattern found in Spanish ballads
  • Romanticism, or the Romantic period/era, an artistic and intellectual movement in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, including
    • Romantic music, the musical style used by Beethoven, Chopin, Brahms, Wagner and other late 18th and 19th-century composers
    • Romantic poetry, the poetic style used by Schiller, Blake, Keats, Wordsworth and other late 18th and 19th-century poets
    • Romanticism in science, a movement in science during the Romantic period
  • Romance (2013 film)

    Romance is a 2013 Telugu Adult Comedy film directed by Darling Swamy and produced by G. Srinivasa Rao and SKN Srinivas on Good Cinemas Group which produced Ee Rojullo in the past. The film stars Prince, Dimple Chopade, Manasa in the lead roles and Saikumar P, Bhargavi and others in vital roles. Apart from direction, Darling Swamy handled the Story, Screenplay and Dialogues while S. B. Uddhav and J. Prabhakar Reddy handled the editing and cinematography respectively. The film released worldwide on 2 August 2013. with an A Certificate from the Censor Board.

    Cast

  • Prince as Krishna
  • Dimple Chopade as Anu
  • Manasa as Lalitha
  • Saikumar P as Bluetooth Babu
  • Bhargavi as Shruti
  • Reception

    Romance is the 4th film by Maruthi Media House. An article about small budget blockbusters and media strategies.

    References


    Romance (meter)

    The romance (the term is Spanish, and is pronounced accordingly: Spanish pronunciation: [roˈmanθe]) is a metrical form used in Spanish poetry. It consists of an indefinite series (tirada) of verses, in which the even-numbered lines have a near-rhyme (assonance) and the odd lines are unrhymed. The lines are octosyllabic (eight syllables to a line); a similar but far less common form is hexasyllabic (six syllables to a line) and is known in Spanish as romancillo (a diminutive of romance); that, or any other form of less than eight syllables may also be referred to as romance corto ("short romance"). A similar form in alexandrines (12 syllables) also exists, but was traditionally used in Spanish only for learned poetry (mester de clerecía).

    Poems in the romance form may be as few as ten verses long, and may extend to over 1,000 verses. They may constitute either epics or erudite romances juglarescos (from the Spanish word whose modern meaning is "juggler"; compare the French jongleur, which can also refer to a minstrel as well as a juggler). The epic forms trace back to the cantares de gesta (the Spanish equivalent of the French chansons de geste) and the lyric forms to the Provençal pastorela.

    Lonely

    Lonely may refer to:

  • Loneliness, a complex and usually unpleasant emotional response to isolation or lack of companionship
  • "Lonely" (2NE1 song), 2011
  • "Lonely" (Akon song), 2005
  • "Lonely" (Hyolyn song)
  • "Lonely" (Julian Lennon song)
  • "Lonely" (Mao Abe song)
  • "Lonely" (Medina song)
  • "Lonely" (Merril Bainbridge song), 1998
  • "Lonely" (Nana song)
  • "Lonely" (Ne-Yo song)
  • "Lonely" (Peter Andre song)
  • "Lonely" (Praga Khan song)
  • "Lonely" (Shannon Noll song), 2006
  • "Lonely" (Sharon Sheeley song)
  • "Lonely" (Tracy Lawrence song)
  • Lonely (Spica EP)
  • "Lonely", a 2005 song by Líbido from the album Lo Último que Hable Ayer
  • "Lonely", a 2007 song by Bon Jovi from the album Lost Highway
  • "Lonely", a 2009 song by Foreigner from the album Can't Slow Down
  • "Lonely", a 1988 song by Crimson Glory from the album Transcendence
  • "Lonely", a 1973 song by Tom Waits from the album Closing Time
  • "Lonely", a 2013 song by Danny Brown from the album Old
  • "Lonely (Amy's Theme)", a 1967 song by Lovin' Spoonful from the album You're a Big Boy Now
  • See also

  • The Lonely (disambiguation)
  • Lonely (Merril Bainbridge song)

    "Lonely" is a pop song written by Merril Bainbridge and Owen Bolwell, produced by Siew for Bainbridge's second album Between the Days (1998). It was released as the album's first single in Australia in April 1998 and the United States and Japan in August 1998 (see 1998 in music) as a CD single. The bridge of the song samples the lyrics from the nursery rhyme "Georgie Porgie".

    The song made its debut to the Australian ARIA Singles Chart at number seventy-four, making the song Bainbridge's fifth song to reach the top one hundred. On its second week it fell three places to seventy-seven but by the next week the song jumped nine places to sixty-eight and after six weeks of being in the chart it broke the top fifty at number forty-eight. After two weeks of being in the top fifty the song peaked at its peak position in Australia at number forty, then dropping out of the top fifty the next week. The song spent a total of three weeks in the top fifty and seventeen weeks in the top one hundred.

    Lonely (Sharon Sheeley song)

    "Lonely" is a song written by Sharon Sheeley and recorded by Eddie Cochran. It was recorded in May 1958 and released posthumously as a single on Liberty F-55278 in August 1960. In the UK the single rose to number 41 on the charts. The U.S. release did not chart. The flip side, "Sweetie Pie", reached number 38 on the UK Singles chart.

    Personnel

  • Eddie Cochran: vocal, guitar
  • Conrad 'Guybo' Smith: electric bass
  • Unidentified: drums
  • Chart performance

    Notes

    External links

  • Eddie Cochran US discography
  • KANT (software)

    KANT is a computer algebra system for mathematicians interested in algebraic number theory, performing sophisticated computations in algebraic number fields, in global function fields, and in local fields. KASH is the associated command line interface. They have been developed by the Algebra and Number Theory research group of the Institute of Mathematics at Technische Universität Berlin under the project leadership of Prof. Dr Michael Pohst. Kant is free for non-commercial use.

    See also

  • List of computer algebra systems
  • References

  • J. Graf von Schmettow (1991). KANT — a tool for computations in algebraic number fields. de Gruyter. pp. 321–330. ISBN 3-11-012394-0. 
  • M. Daberkow; C. Fieker; J. Klüners; M. Pohst; K. Roegner; M. Schörnig; K. Wildanger (1997). "KANT V4". J. Symb. Comp. 24: 267–283. doi:10.1006/jsco.1996.0126. 
  • External links

  • Official website
  • Introduction to KASH3, The KANT Group

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