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ลองค้นหาคำในรูปแบบอื่น ๆ เพื่อให้ได้ผลลัพธ์มากขึ้นหรือน้อยลง: -faustu-, *faustu*
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CMU English Pronouncing Dictionary Dictionary [with local updates]
faustus

ตัวอย่างประโยค จาก Open Subtitles  **ระวัง คำแปลอาจมีข้อผิดพลาด**
You and I both know the Faustus method takes time.Sie und ich, wir wissen, dass die Faustus-Methode Zeit braucht. Making Friends and Influencing People (2014)
Say Faustus doth surrender up his soul. So he will spare him four and twenty years.Faustus übergibt seine Seele, damit er ihm 24 Jahre schenkt. Trick or Treat (1986)
My Doctor Faustus.Mein Doktor Faustus. Shakespeare in Love (1998)
I would like to give you something from Faustus by Christopher Marlowe.Ich möchte gerne etwas aus Christopher Marlowes Faustus vortragen. Shakespeare in Love (1998)
I am Faustus.Ich bin Faustus. Shakespeare in Love (1998)
You are playing my Dr. Faustus this afternoon. Don't spend yourself in sport.Heute Nachmittag spielt Ihr den Dr. Faustus, verausgabt Euch nicht über Gebühr. Shakespeare in Love (1998)
In 'Doctor Faustus', Thomas Mann describes the birth of Noah's son Ham, who was laughing when he was born.In "Doktor Faustus" beschreibt Thomas Mann, wie Noahs Sohn Ham bei seiner Geburt lachte. Nymphomaniac: Vol. II (2013)

CMU English Pronouncing Dictionary Dictionary [with local updates]
faustus

WordNet (3.0)
faust(n) an alchemist of German legend who sold his soul to Mephistopheles in exchange for knowledge, Syn. Faustus
socinus(n) Italian theologian who argued against Trinitarianism (1539-1604), Syn. Fausto Paolo Sozzini, Faustus Socinus

The Collaborative International Dictionary of English (GCIDE) v.0.53
Faust

or , prop. n. Doctor Johann Faust, a person born at Kundling (Knittlingen), Würtemberg, or at Roda, near Weimar, and said to have died in 1538. He was a man of licentious character, a magician, astrologer, alchemist, and soothsayer, who boasted of performing the miracles of Christ. German legend has it that he sold his soul to the devil in exchange for knowledge. It was believed that he was carried off at last by the devil, who had lived with him in the form of a black dog. [ Century Dict. 1906 ]

☞ The legends of Faust were gathered from the then recent traditions concerning him in a book which appeared at the book-fair at Frankfurt-on-the-Main in 1587. It was called "The History of Dr. Faustus, the Notorious Magician and Master of the Black Art, etc." Soon after its appearance it became known in England.

A metrical version of it into English was licensed by Aylmer, Bishop of London, before the end of the year. In 1588 there was a rimed version of it into German, also a translation into low German, and a new edition of the original with some slight changes. In 1689 there appeared a version of the first German Faust book into, French, by Victor Palma Cayet. The English prose version was made from the second edition of the original, that of 1588, and is undated, but probably was made at once. There was a revised edition of it in 1592. In 1592 there was a Dutch translation from the second German edition. This gives the time of the carrying off of Faustus by the devil as the night between the twenty-third and twenty-fourth of October, 1538. The English version also gives 1538 as the year, and it is a date, as we have seen, consistent with trustworthy references to his actual life. Marlowe's play ('The Tragical History of Doctor Faustus') was probably written in 1588, soon after the original story had found its way to England. He treated the legend as a poet, bringing out with all his power its central thought -- man in the pride of knowledge turning from his God. (Morley, Eng. Writers, IX. 254.)

This play was brought to Germany about the beginning of the 17th century, and, after passing through various developments on the stage, finally became a puppet-play, which is still in existence. Lessing wrote parts of two versions of the story. Müller, the painter, published two fragments of his dramatized life of Faust in 1778. Goethe's tragedy (which see) was not published till 1808. Klinger published a romance "Faust's Leben, Thaten und Höllenfahrt" (1791: Borrow translated it in 1826). Klingemann published a tragedy on the subject (1815), Heine a ballet "Der Doctor Faust, ein Tanzpoem" (1851), and Lenau an epic "Faust" (1836). W. G. Wills adapted a play from Goethe's "Faust," which Henry Irving produced in 1885. Calderon's play "El Magico Prodigioso" strongly resembles Goethe's and Marlowe's plays, though founded on the legend of St. Cyprian. [ Century Dict. 1906 ]

Variants: Faustus

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