释义 |
Definition of naturalistic in English: naturalisticadjective natʃ(ə)rəˈlɪstɪkˌnætʃ(ə)rəˈlɪstɪk 1Derived from or closely imitating real life or nature. a naturalistic rock garden Example sentencesExamples - Mumbling, stumbling and uncertain, he managed to combine the theatricality of a great performance with the naturalistic details of finely observed human behaviour.
- Clucking the tongue is a good example, but there are plenty of others - kissing, spitting or slurping noises, for example, or naturalistic imitations of animal sounds.
- New York's Bronx Zoo, one of the greatest and a pioneer of naturalistic wildlife habitats in zoo-keeping, helped save the bison early last century.
- More naturalistic are the latest mosaic ‘pebble ‘tiles, popular for contemporary bathrooms as a floor and wall covering.’
- Discourse analysis of this type involves the transcription and qualitative analysis of speech samples derived from naturalistic speech contexts.
- By the mid-60s, his works had become more naturalistic, more ornithologically precise, and more topographically accurate.
- More than a naturalistic likeness - the poet thought - caricature would be best suited to convey the musician's unconventional persona.
- Does the digital camera evoke more ‘realistic’ or naturalistic performances from actors, who are accustomed to home video cameras in private life?
- The little River Quaggy has been liberated from decades of confinement in a concrete culvert and given a new naturalistic course; a home for wildlife and a delight for people.
- It is also a learning process for the nearby Academy, which has just a few years to work out how to cope with the huge implications of dealing with a new cohort of pupils who have been learning a language in a naturalistic way for seven years.
- Park's naturalistic depiction of brutal violence and sadistic torture often make for uncomfortable viewing.
- It was he who first realized that mundane daily life, relayed in completely naturalistic language, contained within it all the ingredients of tragedy.
- Participant observation has the potential to come closer to a naturalistic emphasis, because the qualitative researcher confronts members of a social setting in their natural environments.
- This genre owed its popularity to a combination of a straightforward and lively descriptive style with panoramic architectural and landscape settings full of naturalistic and genre detail.
- In the past, many Yoruba treated the naturalistic representation of a living person with ambivalence for two main reasons.
2Based on the theory of naturalism in art or literature. 自然主义的 naturalistic paintings of the city 关于城市的自然主义画作。 Example sentencesExamples - The exhibition portrays cross-cultural spirituality and socio-historical references in naturalistic contemporary patterns.
- What we need is realism, the naturalistic panorama of a cityscape unfolding.
- The direction, too, is smart and understated and is helped by the film's clear, naturalistic cinematography.
- His early paintings are tenebrist and naturalistic.
- Native Son is a fine example of the American novel in the naturalistic tradition.
- Munch eschewed the naturalistic approach of Krogh, and incorporated expressionist tendencies in his work.
- Keep the documentary element (the interviews) straightforward and make the dramatic elements feel as real as possible, filming in a naturalistic style with good actors and no apologies.
- Although her perception of her hero Ingres and his Renaissance predecessors was conditioned by her own bizarre personality, she aspired to paint in their naturalistic but imaginative manner.
- Even the small selection illustrated here shows a wide range of expressions, from the rather naturalistic Yoruba twin figures to this highly abstract Metoko pair.
- There is a distinct lack of cinematic gloss, with a mostly hand-held camera capturing scenes in a raw, naturalistic fashion that actually complements the subject matter perfectly.
- Having begun as a poet he turned to prose and resolved to follow Zola's naturalistic experiments.
- They mistrusted theatrical actors as being artificial, so those actors got bypassed and the directors were bringing people off the streets, which did produce a naturalistic kind of actor.
- He returned to Prague in 1920 and in his later work developed a more naturalistic style based on folk art.
- The exciting by-product of this way of working is that it produces a style of theatre that is frequently more engaging, imaginative and transformative than adult theatre with all its stuffy naturalistic conventions.
- However, if you're like me and like either fast-paced, dare-to-be different theatre or at least naturalistic theatre done well, steer clear.
- The film benefits from pared-down, naturalistic cinematography and performances, as well as a pervasive sense of fatalism.
- But toward the end of the 1500s, art began to lose its uniform stylistic character, becoming naturalistic and classicist, analytical and synthetic, all at the same time.
- Bratlie makes her best pitch for coherence in a claustrophobic staging that evokes the oppression of the times, doing what she can to break the play's naturalistic stranglehold.
- Furthermore, the impression of spontaneity in naturalistic Dutch landscape paintings of the 1620s is a consequence of technical facility and not of an impromptu approach to composition.
- The earnestly intense and naturalistic performances, fine for Ibsen, fit poorly here and consequently come off as either dangerously self-indulgent or oddly casual.
- Mask theatre is not naturalistic theatre, it has a more poetic feel, and he's got that sensitivity.
- This motif had already gained currency in the naturalistic representations of Renaissance artists.
- His plays have a closer relationship to the pre-20th century high comedies than to the naturalistic comedies of our own time.
Synonyms realistic, real-life, true-to-life, lifelike, vivid, graphic, representational, photographic factual French vérité informal kitchen-sink, warts and all rare verisimilar, veristic - 2.1 Of or according to the philosophy of naturalism.
(依据)自然主义哲学的 phenomena once considered supernatural have yielded to naturalistic explanation 曾被认为是超自然的现象已经可以用自然主义解释了。 Example sentencesExamples - This was a clash between two perfectly naturalistic theories of astronomy.
- ‘Methodological naturalism’ refers to the idea that as a practical matter science must restrict itself to naturalistic theories.
- Had Darwin had the knowledge about the eye and its associated systems that man has today (which is a great deal more than what it was in his time), he may have given up his naturalistic theory on the origin of living things.
- Here Taylor means that science restricts itself to naturalistic theories, and does not invoke the supernatural.
- A point of clarification: whenever this post mentions defenders of macro-evolution, it is intended to refer to those who believe in a purely naturalistic process.
- Theistic evolution at best includes God as an unnecessary rider in an otherwise purely naturalistic account of life. As such, theistic evolution violates Occam's razor.
- DNA has, I think, spelled the end of traditional naturalistic evolution, which essentially says complexity comes out of simplicity.
- I'm all for pointing out the problems in naturalistic theories of evolution, but that's not what the editorial is about.
- The Higher Criticism is naturalistic and is largely dominated by the theory of evolution.
- But, as with pure naturalistic theories of evolution, your task is to shut up and bow to your superiors, not ask obvious questions.
- Neither, if we live in a purely naturalistic world, are there any ultimate freedoms we can claim, because logically in a closed universe the laws of nature will determine our behaviour.
- Historically, the naturalistic fallacy is the attempt to derive normative conclusions from statements of fact.
- Evolutionary and naturalistic theories of the earth's creation based on uniformitarian assumptions and advocating old-earth theories emerged in the late eighteenth century.
- Any inconsistency - any departure from the laws of science - would argue for a method which was not literally and painstakingly naturalistic.
- And evolution is the naturalistic theory by which animal life has evolved into Homo sapiens.
- Thus, the review consistently refers to ‘naturalistic evolution’, as if other prominent scientific theories are not also naturalistic.
- This draws on naturalistic modes of thinking in Indian intellectual traditions that are opposed to the enchanted and mystical thinking that finds its way into ‘Vedic Science’.
- If this is the case, naturalistic methodology should have no problem differentiating between what is produced by undirected natural causes and that which is produced by intelligent causes.
Derivativesadverb I think this play could be played very naturalistically, or it could be played in a stylised fashion. Example sentencesExamples - The figures were conceived to be painted naturalistically in enamel colors, but this proved to be beyond the technology of the time, so they remained white.
- He depicts the anemone plant naturalistically with stems bending and leaves unfurling.
- World War II has become mythic in our culture, but it is usually treated naturalistically in plays and films.
- What is needed is a collaborative research program that studies family change naturalistically and then moves into the laboratory to more formally test the hypotheses derived from those observations.
Definition of naturalistic in US English: naturalisticadjectiveˌnætʃ(ə)rəˈlɪstɪkˌnaCH(ə)rəˈlistik 1Derived from real life or nature, or imitating it very closely. 模仿自然的;根据自然的 verbatim records of children's speech in naturalistic settings 对孩子在自然环境中言语的逐字记录。 Example sentencesExamples - By the mid-60s, his works had become more naturalistic, more ornithologically precise, and more topographically accurate.
- It was he who first realized that mundane daily life, relayed in completely naturalistic language, contained within it all the ingredients of tragedy.
- More than a naturalistic likeness - the poet thought - caricature would be best suited to convey the musician's unconventional persona.
- Does the digital camera evoke more ‘realistic’ or naturalistic performances from actors, who are accustomed to home video cameras in private life?
- Park's naturalistic depiction of brutal violence and sadistic torture often make for uncomfortable viewing.
- Participant observation has the potential to come closer to a naturalistic emphasis, because the qualitative researcher confronts members of a social setting in their natural environments.
- The little River Quaggy has been liberated from decades of confinement in a concrete culvert and given a new naturalistic course; a home for wildlife and a delight for people.
- Clucking the tongue is a good example, but there are plenty of others - kissing, spitting or slurping noises, for example, or naturalistic imitations of animal sounds.
- In the past, many Yoruba treated the naturalistic representation of a living person with ambivalence for two main reasons.
- Discourse analysis of this type involves the transcription and qualitative analysis of speech samples derived from naturalistic speech contexts.
- This genre owed its popularity to a combination of a straightforward and lively descriptive style with panoramic architectural and landscape settings full of naturalistic and genre detail.
- More naturalistic are the latest mosaic ‘pebble ‘tiles, popular for contemporary bathrooms as a floor and wall covering.’
- Mumbling, stumbling and uncertain, he managed to combine the theatricality of a great performance with the naturalistic details of finely observed human behaviour.
- It is also a learning process for the nearby Academy, which has just a few years to work out how to cope with the huge implications of dealing with a new cohort of pupils who have been learning a language in a naturalistic way for seven years.
- New York's Bronx Zoo, one of the greatest and a pioneer of naturalistic wildlife habitats in zoo-keeping, helped save the bison early last century.
2Based on the theory of naturalism in art or literature. 自然主义的 naturalistic paintings of the city 关于城市的自然主义画作。 Example sentencesExamples - Although her perception of her hero Ingres and his Renaissance predecessors was conditioned by her own bizarre personality, she aspired to paint in their naturalistic but imaginative manner.
- Munch eschewed the naturalistic approach of Krogh, and incorporated expressionist tendencies in his work.
- Keep the documentary element (the interviews) straightforward and make the dramatic elements feel as real as possible, filming in a naturalistic style with good actors and no apologies.
- Native Son is a fine example of the American novel in the naturalistic tradition.
- What we need is realism, the naturalistic panorama of a cityscape unfolding.
- The film benefits from pared-down, naturalistic cinematography and performances, as well as a pervasive sense of fatalism.
- The exhibition portrays cross-cultural spirituality and socio-historical references in naturalistic contemporary patterns.
- The exciting by-product of this way of working is that it produces a style of theatre that is frequently more engaging, imaginative and transformative than adult theatre with all its stuffy naturalistic conventions.
- The direction, too, is smart and understated and is helped by the film's clear, naturalistic cinematography.
- He returned to Prague in 1920 and in his later work developed a more naturalistic style based on folk art.
- But toward the end of the 1500s, art began to lose its uniform stylistic character, becoming naturalistic and classicist, analytical and synthetic, all at the same time.
- His early paintings are tenebrist and naturalistic.
- Mask theatre is not naturalistic theatre, it has a more poetic feel, and he's got that sensitivity.
- There is a distinct lack of cinematic gloss, with a mostly hand-held camera capturing scenes in a raw, naturalistic fashion that actually complements the subject matter perfectly.
- This motif had already gained currency in the naturalistic representations of Renaissance artists.
- Having begun as a poet he turned to prose and resolved to follow Zola's naturalistic experiments.
- Bratlie makes her best pitch for coherence in a claustrophobic staging that evokes the oppression of the times, doing what she can to break the play's naturalistic stranglehold.
- The earnestly intense and naturalistic performances, fine for Ibsen, fit poorly here and consequently come off as either dangerously self-indulgent or oddly casual.
- They mistrusted theatrical actors as being artificial, so those actors got bypassed and the directors were bringing people off the streets, which did produce a naturalistic kind of actor.
- Even the small selection illustrated here shows a wide range of expressions, from the rather naturalistic Yoruba twin figures to this highly abstract Metoko pair.
- His plays have a closer relationship to the pre-20th century high comedies than to the naturalistic comedies of our own time.
- Furthermore, the impression of spontaneity in naturalistic Dutch landscape paintings of the 1620s is a consequence of technical facility and not of an impromptu approach to composition.
- However, if you're like me and like either fast-paced, dare-to-be different theatre or at least naturalistic theatre done well, steer clear.
Synonyms realistic, real-life, true-to-life, lifelike, vivid, graphic, representational, photographic - 2.1 Of or according to the philosophy of naturalism.
(依据)自然主义哲学的 phenomena once considered supernatural have yielded to naturalistic explanation 曾被认为是超自然的现象已经可以用自然主义解释了。 Example sentencesExamples - DNA has, I think, spelled the end of traditional naturalistic evolution, which essentially says complexity comes out of simplicity.
- Here Taylor means that science restricts itself to naturalistic theories, and does not invoke the supernatural.
- This was a clash between two perfectly naturalistic theories of astronomy.
- The Higher Criticism is naturalistic and is largely dominated by the theory of evolution.
- And evolution is the naturalistic theory by which animal life has evolved into Homo sapiens.
- ‘Methodological naturalism’ refers to the idea that as a practical matter science must restrict itself to naturalistic theories.
- Historically, the naturalistic fallacy is the attempt to derive normative conclusions from statements of fact.
- Thus, the review consistently refers to ‘naturalistic evolution’, as if other prominent scientific theories are not also naturalistic.
- I'm all for pointing out the problems in naturalistic theories of evolution, but that's not what the editorial is about.
- But, as with pure naturalistic theories of evolution, your task is to shut up and bow to your superiors, not ask obvious questions.
- Evolutionary and naturalistic theories of the earth's creation based on uniformitarian assumptions and advocating old-earth theories emerged in the late eighteenth century.
- Had Darwin had the knowledge about the eye and its associated systems that man has today (which is a great deal more than what it was in his time), he may have given up his naturalistic theory on the origin of living things.
- If this is the case, naturalistic methodology should have no problem differentiating between what is produced by undirected natural causes and that which is produced by intelligent causes.
- Neither, if we live in a purely naturalistic world, are there any ultimate freedoms we can claim, because logically in a closed universe the laws of nature will determine our behaviour.
- Theistic evolution at best includes God as an unnecessary rider in an otherwise purely naturalistic account of life. As such, theistic evolution violates Occam's razor.
- This draws on naturalistic modes of thinking in Indian intellectual traditions that are opposed to the enchanted and mystical thinking that finds its way into ‘Vedic Science’.
- Any inconsistency - any departure from the laws of science - would argue for a method which was not literally and painstakingly naturalistic.
- A point of clarification: whenever this post mentions defenders of macro-evolution, it is intended to refer to those who believe in a purely naturalistic process.
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