释义 |
Definition of denature in English: denatureverb diːˈneɪtʃədiˈneɪtʃər [with object]often as adjective denatured1Take away or alter the natural qualities of. 使改变本性,改变…的自然属性 many forms of packaged and denatured culture 经包装并改变了原有性质的文化所呈现的多种形式。 Example sentencesExamples - This abuse of language mirrors the abuse which we make our existence: we have denatured it in removing from it any trace of the sacred, in our blind observance of the dictums of project and work.
- A bravura narrative moment reveals itself when he discloses the history of one single apartment, showing how it becomes degraded and denatured as it ceases to be a family home and becomes a drug-dealer's den.
- However, we must hold firmly to the outlines or our production will be diffuse, denatured, and ineffective, not leaving the indelible residue in the mind that an accumulation of arsenic does.
- His colour gets disembodied or denatured in these pictures, but much of its life, as found in his early water colours, issues out in the spirited passages in line.
- Men belch out at superdramatic volumes (nothing ever sounds natural), and mezzos sound nothing short of ridiculous, their voices denatured by the attempt to imbue the music with highbrow seriousness and high volume.
- Curiously, the same logic also appears to be true of the tourist strip, which, in its own tacky way, is a classic example of how run-amok corporate money can leave a place wholly denatured.
- The second half of the book posits that the new sexual morality - a survival technique, really - has disconnected generation from generation and denatured our politics.
- Papers tended to be reduced to the lowest common denominator, inoffensive to any service, even before they reached the chiefs themselves, where the necessity for unanimous agreement caused them to be denatured even further.
- I guess the tripe was what the cabbage was stuffed with; I don't know because everything was so denatured it had no flavour.
- Only by reconsidering these choices can we see the loss of vision entailed by modern science, and perhaps how science remains parasitic upon the less denatured reality from which it arose.
- In all his fiction, rural black folk culture stands upon its own foundations, in some sense independent of and in opposition to an urbanized, industrialized, mechanistic, and denatured Western civilization.
- This is music denatured: homogenised, pasteurised, and sterilised.
- Ellis's colors are equally denatured, deadpan and flattened; although at times a kind of cinematic backlighting illuminates them and gives them dimension.
- Halberstam chronicles some of the hazing and banter, but for the most part this vividly masculine world is denatured.
- 1.1 Make (alcohol) unfit for drinking by the addition of toxic or foul-tasting substances.
(添加毒物或恶味物质)使(酒)不适口 Example sentencesExamples - Use denatured alcohol to remove dried latex paint spills or drips.
- A car on one of the trains is also leaking denatured alcohol, which of course, is extremely dangerous.
- A number of cars derailed, including one that began leaking denatured alcohol.
- But SDA (specially denatured alcohol) is treated with denaturants which permit its use in a greater number of specialized arts and industries.
- 1.2Biochemistry Destroy the characteristic properties of (a protein or other biological macromolecule) by heat, acidity, or other effect which disrupts its molecular conformation.
〔生化〕(加热或添加酸性物质)使(蛋白质或其他生物大分子)变性 Example sentencesExamples - Both these changes occur because heat denatures the myoglobin.
- Raising the temperature will most likely denature the protein.
- When food is cooked, some of its proteins become denatured.
- Experimentally, urea and guanidinium chloride are widely used as denaturant agents, but it is still not clear by which molecular mechanism they denature proteins.
- Heat stress can denature proteins, and the cell mobilizes chaperonins like a small army of physical therapists to twist everything back into its proper conformation.
OriginLate 17th century: from French dénaturer, from dé- (expressing reversal) + nature 'nature'. Definition of denature in US English: denatureverbdiˈneɪtʃərdēˈnāCHər [with object]often as adjective denatured1Take away or alter the natural qualities of. 使改变本性,改变…的自然属性 empty verbalisms and denatured ceremonies Example sentencesExamples - His colour gets disembodied or denatured in these pictures, but much of its life, as found in his early water colours, issues out in the spirited passages in line.
- A bravura narrative moment reveals itself when he discloses the history of one single apartment, showing how it becomes degraded and denatured as it ceases to be a family home and becomes a drug-dealer's den.
- Ellis's colors are equally denatured, deadpan and flattened; although at times a kind of cinematic backlighting illuminates them and gives them dimension.
- This abuse of language mirrors the abuse which we make our existence: we have denatured it in removing from it any trace of the sacred, in our blind observance of the dictums of project and work.
- Papers tended to be reduced to the lowest common denominator, inoffensive to any service, even before they reached the chiefs themselves, where the necessity for unanimous agreement caused them to be denatured even further.
- The second half of the book posits that the new sexual morality - a survival technique, really - has disconnected generation from generation and denatured our politics.
- Only by reconsidering these choices can we see the loss of vision entailed by modern science, and perhaps how science remains parasitic upon the less denatured reality from which it arose.
- Halberstam chronicles some of the hazing and banter, but for the most part this vividly masculine world is denatured.
- Men belch out at superdramatic volumes (nothing ever sounds natural), and mezzos sound nothing short of ridiculous, their voices denatured by the attempt to imbue the music with highbrow seriousness and high volume.
- I guess the tripe was what the cabbage was stuffed with; I don't know because everything was so denatured it had no flavour.
- However, we must hold firmly to the outlines or our production will be diffuse, denatured, and ineffective, not leaving the indelible residue in the mind that an accumulation of arsenic does.
- This is music denatured: homogenised, pasteurised, and sterilised.
- Curiously, the same logic also appears to be true of the tourist strip, which, in its own tacky way, is a classic example of how run-amok corporate money can leave a place wholly denatured.
- In all his fiction, rural black folk culture stands upon its own foundations, in some sense independent of and in opposition to an urbanized, industrialized, mechanistic, and denatured Western civilization.
- 1.1 Make (alcohol) unfit for drinking by the addition of toxic or foul-tasting substances.
(添加毒物或恶味物质)使(酒)不适口 Example sentencesExamples - Use denatured alcohol to remove dried latex paint spills or drips.
- A number of cars derailed, including one that began leaking denatured alcohol.
- But SDA (specially denatured alcohol) is treated with denaturants which permit its use in a greater number of specialized arts and industries.
- A car on one of the trains is also leaking denatured alcohol, which of course, is extremely dangerous.
- 1.2Biochemistry Destroy the characteristic properties of (a protein or other biological macromolecule) by heat, acidity, or other effects that disrupt its molecular conformation.
〔生化〕(加热或添加酸性物质)使(蛋白质或其他生物大分子)变性 Example sentencesExamples - Heat stress can denature proteins, and the cell mobilizes chaperonins like a small army of physical therapists to twist everything back into its proper conformation.
- Raising the temperature will most likely denature the protein.
- When food is cooked, some of its proteins become denatured.
- Both these changes occur because heat denatures the myoglobin.
- Experimentally, urea and guanidinium chloride are widely used as denaturant agents, but it is still not clear by which molecular mechanism they denature proteins.
OriginLate 17th century: from French dénaturer, from dé- (expressing reversal) + nature ‘nature’. |