Dramatic vs Apocalyptic - What's the difference?
dramatic | apocalyptic |
Of or relating to the drama.
*
Striking in appearance or effect.
*
* {{quote-magazine, date=2013-08-17, volume=408, issue=8849, magazine=(The Economist)
, title= Having a powerful, expressive singing voice.
Of or relating to an apocalypse:
# Of or relating to an apocalypse (a revelation), revelatory; prophetic.
#* 1985', Donald A. Hagner, ''Apocalyptic Motifs in the Gospel of Matthew: Continuity and Discontinuity'', quoted in '''2007 by Jonathan T. Pennington in ''Heaven and Earth in the Gospel of Matthew , page 92:
#* 2002 , Peter W. Smith, In the Day of the Lord: The Exciting and Promised Fulfillment , page 7:
# Of or relating to an apocalypse (a disaster).
#* 2001 , Richard A. Horsley, Hearing the whole story: the politics of plot in Mark's gospel , page 122:
#* 2010 , Philip Leroy Culbertson, Elaine Mary Wainwright, Bible in popular culture , page 184:
Portending a future apocalypse (disaster, devastation or doom).
(nonstandard) Eggcorn of apoplectic.
As adjectives the difference between dramatic and apocalyptic
is that dramatic is dramatic while apocalyptic is of or relating to an apocalypse:.As a noun apocalyptic is
one who predicts apocalypse.dramatic
English
Alternative forms
* dramatickAdjective
(en adjective)Best and brightest, passage=Poland has made some dramatic gains in education in the past decade. Before 2000 half of the country’s rural adults had finished only primary school. Yet international rankings now put the country’s students well ahead of America’s in science and maths (the strongest predictor of future earnings), even as the country spends far less per pupil. }}
Derived terms
* nondramaticapocalyptic
English
Adjective
(-)- "From beginning to end, and throughout, the Gospel makes such frequent use of apocalyptic' motifs and the '''apocalyptic''' viewpoint that it deserves to be called the '''''apocalyptic Gospel ."
- This was because apocalyptic stories — from the Greek word apohalupsis which means “reveal” — uses the vocabulary of symbols and numbers and contains concealed messages that secular listeners cannot comprehend.
- In fact, interpreters commonly declare that Mark is an "apocalyptic " Gospel. When they read Jesus' long speech toward the end of the Gospel (chap. 13), they even detect a veritable "apocalypse": "Wars and rumors of wars, "
- These bookends house a wealth of apocalyptic stories. The Bible, like some street preacher with a sign, shouts, “The end is near!”
- He was apocalyptically furious.