don quixote造句1 Don Quixote, in my view, was not really mad.
2 In my opinion, Don Quixote was conducting an experiment.
3 A sketch of Don Quixote hangs on one wall between two book-cases.
4 For some reason, the book brings Don Quixote to mind, charging in from the right.
5 Remember: throughout the book Don Quixote is preoccupied by the question of posterity.
6 Don Quixote mistook the windmills for giants.
7 B : How stupid Don Quixote is!
8 The second part analyzes the main piece of DON QUIXOTE.
9 1605: The first part of Don Quixote by Miguel de Cervantes was published in Madrid on January 16.
10 Don Quixote is an outstanding comedy in the history of European literature.
11 DON QUIXOTE is a novel which is worthy of exploration at any time.
12 Often, the people who laugh at Don Quixote end up imitating him.
13 An even earlier reference can be found in "Don Quixote" by Miguel de Cervantes, from 1605 (the exception being Cervantes substituting "goats" for "sheep"
14 After the men gain freedom, Don Quixote commands them to present themselves to Dulcinea, which they refuse to do out of fear for their safety.
15 Falstaff is a sort of Don Quixote , yet not quite like Don Quixote, etc.
16 Tension between Don Quixote andin their witty dialogue; comedy and tragedy coexist in the protagonist.
17 Picasso's elongated don quixote.
18 The main characters were Don Quixote , a poor county gentleman who has read too many chivalric romances. His companion was Sancho Panza.
19 You are like Don Quixote in your actions. What you are doing is beating the air.
20 Don Quixote has done much more than stand the test of time.
21 Don Quixote imagines himself as a knight-errant. He refuses to see Dr. Carrasco and insists that he is not mentally disturbed.
22 For eight more days Don Quixote worried and fretted over this problem.
23 Yet wouldn't we all like to be a little bit more like Don Quixote?
24 Literary buffs, even if they have never been to Spain, will recognise them as the ferocious giants attacked by Don Quixote, Miguel de Cervantes 's fictional 17th-century hero.
25 Parody Technique in travesty of knight stories reinforces the artistic effect in Don Quixote.
26 Sancho promises to return as quickly as he can, and after watching Don Quixote take off his trousers and do a headstand to indicate his madness, he sets off on Rocinante.
27 Choose a couple from The Taming of the Shrew or Don Quixote to discuss.