Tristram
Học thuậtThân thiện
Definition
- Proper noun:
- A legendary medieval knight: Tristram (also spelled Tristan) is a central figure in Arthurian legend, renowned as a Cornish knight of the Round Table and the nephew of King Mark of Cornwall.
- The hero of a tragic romance: He is famously known for his doomed love affair with Iseult (Isolde), the bride of his uncle, King Mark, after they accidentally consume a love potion.
Examples of Usage
- Proper noun:
Advanced Usage
- "Tristram's lament": A phrase sometimes used to refer to an expression of profound, tragic sorrow, stemming from the knight's fate.
Variants and Related Words
- Tristan: The more common modern spelling of the knight's name.
- Tristram and Iseult: The name of the core legendary romance cycle (also called Tristan and Isolde).
- Tristanic (adj): Pertaining to or characteristic of Tristram/Tristan, often implying a doomed, passionate, or chivalric romance.
Synonyms
- The lover: In the context of the legend, he is synonymous with the archetypal tragic lover.
- The knight: Refers to his primary role as a chivalric hero.
Related Phrases
- A Tristram and Iseult situation: An idiom describing a scenario involving a complex, forbidden, and tragically fated love triangle.
Noun
- (Middle Ages) the nephew of the king of Cornwall who (according to legend) fell in love with his uncle's bride (Iseult) after they mistakenly drank a love potion that left them eternally in love with each other