Idyll in a sentence as a noun

Ah, yes, let's have our 50's idyll back.

Is this principle enshrined in any law at all, or is it just some neutrality idyll that we assume others share?

Sometimes that means being the boogeyman in order to force them to study or whatever, sometimes makes us appear naive by painting an idyll.

There's nothing wrong with seeking stability over excitement, but I sort of worry about people envisioning the whole "Great Plains" idyll.

I guess you could give pause and think that the spirit of America is more accurately reflected in so called “cancel culture” than the romantic idyll of it you suggest.

It posits that America's idyll of a tech-free natural scene is actually a balance of technology and nature, and is a artificial nature propped up by machine, and demonstrates this history of this tension in American life from Shakespeare to Jefferson to Thoreau to the modern day.

"It's tempting, I agree, to romanticize our species' distant past, to imagine that our hunter-gatherer ancestors enjoyed what Christian mythology calls the Garden of Eden, and that, had they but not invented agriculture, with its ties to the land and its back-breaking labor, we would even today still recline in paradisaical idyll.

Idyll definitions

noun

an episode of such pastoral or romantic charm as to qualify as the subject of a poetic idyll

noun

a musical composition that evokes rural life

See also: pastorale pastoral idyl

noun

a short poem descriptive of rural or pastoral life

See also: eclogue bucolic idyl