Juvenilia is an English word. Below you'll find 8 example sentences showing how it's used in practice.
Juvenilia in a sentence
Juvenilia meaning
Works produced during an artist's or author's youth.
Using Juvenilia
- The main meaning on this page is: Works produced during an artist's or author's youth.
- In the example corpus, juvenilia often appears in combinations such as: of juvenilia.
Context around Juvenilia
- Average sentence length in these examples: 23.9 words
- Position in the sentence: 3 start, 2 middle, 3 end
- Sentence types: 8 statements, 0 questions, 0 exclamations
Corpus analysis for Juvenilia
- In this selection, "juvenilia" usually appears near the start of the sentence. The average example has 23.9 words, and this corpus slice is mostly made up of statements.
- Around the word, unpublished, section and manuscript stand out and add context to how "juvenilia" is used.
- Recognizable usage signals include 48 58 juvenilia around 1831 and collections of juvenilia of any. That gives this page its own corpus information beyond isolated example sentences.
- By corpus frequency, "juvenilia" sits close to words such as aaaaa, aaba and aafc, which helps place it inside the broader word index.
Example types with juvenilia
The same corpus examples are grouped by length and sentence type, making it easier to see the contexts in which the word appears:
The result is one of the largest collections of juvenilia of any English writer. (14 words)
Her mother's collection of her poems forms one of the largest collections extant of juvenilia by any English writer. (20 words)
Recent scholarship, Twomey, Ryan "The Child is Father of the Man": Importance of Juvenilia in the Development of the Author. (20 words)
All of them, from his juvenilia through “Greater Clements,” which was written while he and Baker were in the fraught process of adopting their daughter, explore the need for human connection and the difficulty of achieving it. (37 words)
Fraser, The Brontës, pp. 48–58 Juvenilia Around 1831, when Anne was eleven, she and Emily broke away from Charlotte and Branwell to create and develop their own fantasy world, Gondal. (31 words)
Found in the "Juvenilia" section of her The Collected Poems of Sylvia Plath (HarperPerennial pp 320–321), it is one of Plath's more erotic poems. (26 words)
Example sentences (8)
All of them, from his juvenilia through “Greater Clements,” which was written while he and Baker were in the fraught process of adopting their daughter, explore the need for human connection and the difficulty of achieving it.
Found in the "Juvenilia" section of her The Collected Poems of Sylvia Plath (HarperPerennial pp 320–321), it is one of Plath's more erotic poems.
Fraser, The Brontës, pp. 48–58 Juvenilia Around 1831, when Anne was eleven, she and Emily broke away from Charlotte and Branwell to create and develop their own fantasy world, Gondal.
Her mother's collection of her poems forms one of the largest collections extant of juvenilia by any English writer.
Netherlands: Hes & De Graaf, 2012, however, has uncovered the importance of Edgeworth's previously unpublished juvenilia manuscript, The Double Disguise (1786).
Recent scholarship, Twomey, Ryan "The Child is Father of the Man": Importance of Juvenilia in the Development of the Author.
The result is one of the largest collections of juvenilia of any English writer.
The sagas they created were episodic and elaborate, and they exist in incomplete manuscripts, some of which have been published as juvenilia.
Common combinations with juvenilia
These word pairs occur most frequently in English texts:
- of juvenilia 3×