释义 |
Definition of reframe in English: reframeverb [with object]1Place (a picture or photograph) in a new frame. 给(图片,照片)换框,重新装裱 Example sentencesExamples - Finally, the watercolours were reframed using a more neutral wooden frame and special non-reflective glazing.
- Here, I've created a display you can make for your shop that can motivate your customer to reframe family pictures that already decorate their office or home.
- ‘Because reframing the portraits is a preventative measure, without the grant the project might have been put on hold,’ Paisley said.
- I want to reframe this lithograph and put it on display.
- Dr. Stanley would likely get the same response if he asked millionaires about reframing their artwork.
- I noticed he had the picture of us reframed and it was on his desk where it always had been.
- Allen went through the program's application process and was awarded a contract by the league to reframe more than 300 pictures to fit the color scheme at the league's new headquarters on Park Avenue in New York.
- The Thomsons' predicament is a stellar leap away from the world of Matisse copies and Jack Vettriano posters, but the decision to reframe the Rubens isn't as barmy as it sounds.
- For example, she once reframed a self-portrait by her sister, but decided that she liked the original frame better.
2Frame or express (words or a concept or plan) differently. 全新地拟定(或表达)(话语、概念或计划) 我重新表述了我的问题。 Example sentencesExamples - In any case, the timing is ideal for social justice advocates to help reframe the terms of this crucial debate, which will have an immediate impact on public health and far-reaching consequences for communities of color.
- They rarely test how reframing the debate might change perceptions.
- And when someone challenges him, he does not fight - he reframes the argument.
- To reframe the question: Is it a good idea to replace a piece of our defined benefit social security system with a defined contribution plan where individuals invest part of their contribution themselves?
- I posted a glowing review of this speech back in June of 2003 because I thought it was one of the best examples of reframing the economic issues I had seen in many a day.
- It reframes the notion of risk by discussing the socio-economic, philosophical and metaphysical risks associated with GMOs.
- ‘These issues have to be reframed and understood as ‘moral’ issues,’ Gore says.
- More than merely instilling a positive attitude, cognitive-behavioral therapy teaches patients to reframe their expectations about what will happen if they exert themselves.
- One thing they all have in common is a blurring of the traditional boundaries between subjects and objects, which automatically reframes the issue of social agency.
- For children, the liminal space of play allows them to reconfigure power relationships, explore identities, and reframe actions.
- In this case, it appears that the Madison Avenue-driven war campaign has succeeded in reframing the debate onto grounds that Republicans found electorally fertile.
- Edwards reframes the question right away, goes on the offensive, and talks about people.
- It was the counselor's role to help the youths clarify and reframe belief constructs while helping to identify and translate the subconscious into the conscious.
- I, like a math teacher, reframed the question to make the logical point.
- Intellectually, I've also reframed my strategy.
- He successfully reframed the issue as being not about petty internal rules, but instead the little man standing up against the big political machine.
- Lawyers can read such things and see what hasn't been said and pose necessary questions and reframe arguments and so forth.
- She elicits data, then frames and reframes the situation to keep the discussion moving.
- Clinton did what he could to survive, reframe the Democratic image and move the country forward while under monumental pressure from the opposition.
- We are ahead of the game, we can show audiences the big picture, and reframe the issues that confront all of us.
Definition of reframe in US English: reframeverbrēˈfrām [with object]1Place (a picture or photograph) in a new frame. 给(图片,照片)换框,重新装裱 Example sentencesExamples - Allen went through the program's application process and was awarded a contract by the league to reframe more than 300 pictures to fit the color scheme at the league's new headquarters on Park Avenue in New York.
- Here, I've created a display you can make for your shop that can motivate your customer to reframe family pictures that already decorate their office or home.
- Dr. Stanley would likely get the same response if he asked millionaires about reframing their artwork.
- For example, she once reframed a self-portrait by her sister, but decided that she liked the original frame better.
- ‘Because reframing the portraits is a preventative measure, without the grant the project might have been put on hold,’ Paisley said.
- I noticed he had the picture of us reframed and it was on his desk where it always had been.
- The Thomsons' predicament is a stellar leap away from the world of Matisse copies and Jack Vettriano posters, but the decision to reframe the Rubens isn't as barmy as it sounds.
- I want to reframe this lithograph and put it on display.
- Finally, the watercolours were reframed using a more neutral wooden frame and special non-reflective glazing.
2Frame or express (words or a concept or plan) differently. 全新地拟定(或表达)(话语、概念或计划) 我重新表述了我的问题。 Example sentencesExamples - Intellectually, I've also reframed my strategy.
- It was the counselor's role to help the youths clarify and reframe belief constructs while helping to identify and translate the subconscious into the conscious.
- He successfully reframed the issue as being not about petty internal rules, but instead the little man standing up against the big political machine.
- And when someone challenges him, he does not fight - he reframes the argument.
- We are ahead of the game, we can show audiences the big picture, and reframe the issues that confront all of us.
- To reframe the question: Is it a good idea to replace a piece of our defined benefit social security system with a defined contribution plan where individuals invest part of their contribution themselves?
- She elicits data, then frames and reframes the situation to keep the discussion moving.
- In this case, it appears that the Madison Avenue-driven war campaign has succeeded in reframing the debate onto grounds that Republicans found electorally fertile.
- Clinton did what he could to survive, reframe the Democratic image and move the country forward while under monumental pressure from the opposition.
- They rarely test how reframing the debate might change perceptions.
- Edwards reframes the question right away, goes on the offensive, and talks about people.
- More than merely instilling a positive attitude, cognitive-behavioral therapy teaches patients to reframe their expectations about what will happen if they exert themselves.
- It reframes the notion of risk by discussing the socio-economic, philosophical and metaphysical risks associated with GMOs.
- ‘These issues have to be reframed and understood as ‘moral’ issues,’ Gore says.
- One thing they all have in common is a blurring of the traditional boundaries between subjects and objects, which automatically reframes the issue of social agency.
- Lawyers can read such things and see what hasn't been said and pose necessary questions and reframe arguments and so forth.
- In any case, the timing is ideal for social justice advocates to help reframe the terms of this crucial debate, which will have an immediate impact on public health and far-reaching consequences for communities of color.
- I, like a math teacher, reframed the question to make the logical point.
- I posted a glowing review of this speech back in June of 2003 because I thought it was one of the best examples of reframing the economic issues I had seen in many a day.
- For children, the liminal space of play allows them to reconfigure power relationships, explore identities, and reframe actions.
|