释义 |
Definition of mannerism in English: mannerismnoun ˈmanərɪz(ə)mˈmænəˌrɪzəm 1A habitual gesture or way of speaking or behaving. 惯用的手势;言谈举止;个人气质;癖好 learning the great man's speeches and studying his mannerisms 学习伟人的演讲,研究伟人的举止。 Example sentencesExamples - We looked alike and had the same mannerisms and laugh.
- I don't want their looks, I don't want their dramatic mannerisms or anything like that.
- While Kaufman only met the real Orlean at the end of the shoot, method actor Cage spent time studying his subject's mannerisms.
- It would be another excuse for Sir Marcus to announce all of his eldest daughter's perfect traits and mannerisms.
- All individuals have different traits and characteristics and differ from one another in mannerisms and mental abilities.
- Despite their quirks and mannerisms, when the kids arrive at camp, they feel accepted.
- I saw individuals, each with their own characteristics, mannerisms, perspectives.
- There is a realness to their characters; their language is vulgar and their mannerisms are disturbing.
- My friends and colleagues seem to delight in my Australian mannerisms and question me constantly about customs at home.
- As time went on, they became even more familiar with the mannerisms and habits of one another.
- The actors inherit these mannerisms and make the characters their own in the most delightful of ways.
- The writing has an oratorical eloquence marked in places by mannerisms probably deriving from oral delivery.
- Not Campbell, who employs all the quirks and mannerisms that have made him one of the most beloved cult actors of all time.
- That was because his mannerisms were gentle, not brutal.
- This involved studying the mannerisms of the cartoon version of Daphne.
- The guy who does the voice of the French Colombo is a legend in his own right, taking what Peter Falk says and adding his own mannerisms and characteristics.
- Countless phrases and mannerisms have made their way from the show into my speech.
- Manners and mannerisms that had earlier stuck with them now undergo drastic changes.
- We adopt their mannerisms, and little quirks, and while doing so, we may lose our own, and lose our sense of identity.
- It was eerie how he had the same voice and mannerisms as Leigh.
Synonyms idiosyncrasy, quirk, oddity, foible, trait, peculiarity, habit, characteristic, characteristic gesture, trick - 1.1Psychiatry An ordinary gesture or expression that becomes abnormal through exaggeration or repetition.
〔精神病学〕病态的举止(或表情) Example sentencesExamples - Social services staff in Leicester added that he spoke with a soft Irish accent and may be noticeable because of his distinct mannerism of blinking excessively while talking.
2mass noun Excessive use of a distinctive style in art, literature, or music. (文学艺术或音乐上)对独特风格的滥用(或不自然的模仿) he seemed deliberately to be stripping his art of mannerism 他似乎在有意从其艺术中去除对独特风格的生硬模仿。 Example sentencesExamples - He seems thus to be further pressing the case for himself as experimentalist modern, while betraying some anxiety that his devices will be seen as mere mannerism.
- Meier provided her own tone and mannerism for each of these four characters.
- Still, it's hard to imagine any wealth of extras making up for the sometimes monotonous mannerism of these murder-on-the-mind motion pictures.
- Johnson plays the innate clumsiness and discomfort that we'd expect to accompany a recent bodily acquisition like this with apparent ease and deft comedic mannerism.
- Miles, the more successful, exaggerated the decorative qualities of his father's style to the point of mannerism.
- Newman's amount of dialogue in the film is minimal and much of the role is conveyed through mannerism and action, yet he seems to settle into the role with ease.
- Hunter Shooting at Birds bares the unmistakable influence of Rembrandt in its mannerism, but its unity of body and gun is entirely modern.
- And what enhances the quality of the show is Jhansi's ease with dialects and mannerism.
- As Mitchell, he is all surface mannerism with no depth, an unconvincing Southern accent in a hat.
- He relies on voice and mannerism when impersonating Chris Eubank and Loyd Grossman, as well as old favourites Elvis Presley and Muhammad Ali.
- All has not by any means been praise; critics have on occasion thought the poetry monotone, close to mannerism, too determinedly dour or black-humored.
- Apart from his own conscience, the writer will be curbed from falling into mannerism and affectation by the nature of his audience and, often, by the significance of what he has to say.
- While the women's roles have been depicted with nuances and texture, his is all bluster and mannerism, with no depth.
- However, his music failed to evolve stylistically after the early 1830s and he was often charged with mannerism by less sympathetic critics.
- In the early days John was routinely accused of glibness, superficiality, mannerism, of Pop-Art vacancy and amorality.
- She treats the opportunity with diligence and skill and dresses it with just the right helping of mannerism that passes for great acting.
- He has been compared to the likes of Paul Newman, Harrison Ford and has been heralded as a timeless, classic leading man, without movie star mannerism.
- It is like some wavering memory whose forgotten bits have been substituted with pop mannerism.
- Billing himself as the ‘Genuine Nerd from Cleveland Ohio,’ his presence and mannerism are mesmerizing.
- It doesn't adhere - and barely refers - to any codified technique, thus dodging the trap of arty mannerism.
3mass noun A style of 16th-century Italian art preceding the Baroque, characterized by distortions in scale and perspective and the use of bright, often lurid colours. It is particularly associated with the work of Parmigianino, Pontormo, Vasari, and the later Michelangelo. 风格主义,矫饰主义(16世纪出现于巴洛克时期之前的一种意大利艺术风格,强调比例、光线和透视的特别效果,常使用亮色和耀眼的色彩;尤见于蓬托尔莫、瓦萨里以及米开朗琪罗后期的作品) Example sentencesExamples - Out of the art of the High Renaissance there developed a style characterized by a sense of extreme elegance and grace, which became known as Mannerism.
- In its writhing poses, the Massacre, in particular, stands out as testament to Bonifacio's avant-garde enthusiasm for Mannerism.
- Friedlaender felt uncertain about the term ‘Baroque,’ preferring to point out its viability as an alternative to the contortions and non-normative aspects of Mannerism.
- She had little formal education but travelled widely in Europe where her somewhat dramatic taste led to an interest in Italian Mannerism, German Romanticism, Pre-Raphaelitism, and the decadents.
- Ideas from abroad - notably the playful distortions of Italian Mannerism - eventually crowd into the tradition established by Van Eyck, upsetting its careful measure.
Derivativesadjective & noun ˈmanərɪst If anything, as with Mantegna and the Italian mannerists, his height is exaggerated. Example sentencesExamples - One possible source for Bordon's interest in this iconographic detail lies in his response to Giulio Romano's mannerist style in Rome and Mantua.
- The Man Without a Past demonstrates that Kaurismaki's deadpan mannerist style has not only aged well, but also deepened emotionally, tapping into a rich melancholic vein of compassion and tenderness.
- Stepan shows how the artist also draws on non-African artistic sources, including mannerist motifs by Edvard Munch.
- For critics of the mannerist genre, analysis is largely already prescribed.
adjective manəˈrɪstɪkˌmænəˈrɪstɪk Maybe there is sometimes a certain wilful ‘artiness’ in some of his music that can become manneristic and a little pretentious. Example sentencesExamples - This manneristic behaviour was difficult to control despite behavioural therapy or physical restraint.
- He developed severe manneristic and ritualistic behavior at around the age of two as documented on the videotape.
- Facial expressions in schizophrenic patients are often described as bizarre and manneristic movements and were already observed long before the introduction of neuroleptics.
- I found that manneristic characteristics were there in the schizophrenic patient and I made this connection between mannerism in art and culture and the mannerism evident in the expressions of my schizophrenic patients.
adverb
Definition of mannerism in US English: mannerismnounˈmanəˌrizəmˈmænəˌrɪzəm 1A habitual gesture or way of speaking or behaving; an idiosyncrasy. 惯用的手势;言谈举止;个人气质;癖好 learning the great man's speeches and studying his mannerisms 学习伟人的演讲,研究伟人的举止。 Example sentencesExamples - Despite their quirks and mannerisms, when the kids arrive at camp, they feel accepted.
- Countless phrases and mannerisms have made their way from the show into my speech.
- All individuals have different traits and characteristics and differ from one another in mannerisms and mental abilities.
- We looked alike and had the same mannerisms and laugh.
- It was eerie how he had the same voice and mannerisms as Leigh.
- While Kaufman only met the real Orlean at the end of the shoot, method actor Cage spent time studying his subject's mannerisms.
- I don't want their looks, I don't want their dramatic mannerisms or anything like that.
- Not Campbell, who employs all the quirks and mannerisms that have made him one of the most beloved cult actors of all time.
- There is a realness to their characters; their language is vulgar and their mannerisms are disturbing.
- I saw individuals, each with their own characteristics, mannerisms, perspectives.
- We adopt their mannerisms, and little quirks, and while doing so, we may lose our own, and lose our sense of identity.
- Manners and mannerisms that had earlier stuck with them now undergo drastic changes.
- That was because his mannerisms were gentle, not brutal.
- The writing has an oratorical eloquence marked in places by mannerisms probably deriving from oral delivery.
- It would be another excuse for Sir Marcus to announce all of his eldest daughter's perfect traits and mannerisms.
- The actors inherit these mannerisms and make the characters their own in the most delightful of ways.
- The guy who does the voice of the French Colombo is a legend in his own right, taking what Peter Falk says and adding his own mannerisms and characteristics.
- This involved studying the mannerisms of the cartoon version of Daphne.
- As time went on, they became even more familiar with the mannerisms and habits of one another.
- My friends and colleagues seem to delight in my Australian mannerisms and question me constantly about customs at home.
Synonyms idiosyncrasy, quirk, oddity, foible, trait, peculiarity, habit, characteristic, characteristic gesture, trick - 1.1Psychiatry An ordinary gesture or expression that becomes abnormal through exaggeration or repetition.
〔精神病学〕病态的举止(或表情) Example sentencesExamples - Social services staff in Leicester added that he spoke with a soft Irish accent and may be noticeable because of his distinct mannerism of blinking excessively while talking.
2Excessive or self-conscious use of a distinctive style in art, literature, or music. (文学艺术或音乐上)对独特风格的滥用(或不自然的模仿) he seemed deliberately to be stripping his art of mannerism 他似乎在有意从其艺术中去除对独特风格的生硬模仿。 Example sentencesExamples - It is like some wavering memory whose forgotten bits have been substituted with pop mannerism.
- Miles, the more successful, exaggerated the decorative qualities of his father's style to the point of mannerism.
- While the women's roles have been depicted with nuances and texture, his is all bluster and mannerism, with no depth.
- Johnson plays the innate clumsiness and discomfort that we'd expect to accompany a recent bodily acquisition like this with apparent ease and deft comedic mannerism.
- Hunter Shooting at Birds bares the unmistakable influence of Rembrandt in its mannerism, but its unity of body and gun is entirely modern.
- Newman's amount of dialogue in the film is minimal and much of the role is conveyed through mannerism and action, yet he seems to settle into the role with ease.
- He relies on voice and mannerism when impersonating Chris Eubank and Loyd Grossman, as well as old favourites Elvis Presley and Muhammad Ali.
- Meier provided her own tone and mannerism for each of these four characters.
- All has not by any means been praise; critics have on occasion thought the poetry monotone, close to mannerism, too determinedly dour or black-humored.
- He has been compared to the likes of Paul Newman, Harrison Ford and has been heralded as a timeless, classic leading man, without movie star mannerism.
- It doesn't adhere - and barely refers - to any codified technique, thus dodging the trap of arty mannerism.
- He seems thus to be further pressing the case for himself as experimentalist modern, while betraying some anxiety that his devices will be seen as mere mannerism.
- Still, it's hard to imagine any wealth of extras making up for the sometimes monotonous mannerism of these murder-on-the-mind motion pictures.
- As Mitchell, he is all surface mannerism with no depth, an unconvincing Southern accent in a hat.
- And what enhances the quality of the show is Jhansi's ease with dialects and mannerism.
- Apart from his own conscience, the writer will be curbed from falling into mannerism and affectation by the nature of his audience and, often, by the significance of what he has to say.
- She treats the opportunity with diligence and skill and dresses it with just the right helping of mannerism that passes for great acting.
- However, his music failed to evolve stylistically after the early 1830s and he was often charged with mannerism by less sympathetic critics.
- In the early days John was routinely accused of glibness, superficiality, mannerism, of Pop-Art vacancy and amorality.
- Billing himself as the ‘Genuine Nerd from Cleveland Ohio,’ his presence and mannerism are mesmerizing.
3A style of 16th-century Italian art preceding the Baroque, characterized by unusual effects of scale, lighting, and perspective, and the use of bright, often lurid colors. It is particularly associated with the work of Pontormo, Vasari,and the later Michelangelo. 风格主义,矫饰主义(16世纪出现于巴洛克时期之前的一种意大利艺术风格,强调比例、光线和透视的特别效果,常使用亮色和耀眼的色彩;尤见于蓬托尔莫、瓦萨里以及米开朗琪罗后期的作品) Example sentencesExamples - She had little formal education but travelled widely in Europe where her somewhat dramatic taste led to an interest in Italian Mannerism, German Romanticism, Pre-Raphaelitism, and the decadents.
- Friedlaender felt uncertain about the term ‘Baroque,’ preferring to point out its viability as an alternative to the contortions and non-normative aspects of Mannerism.
- In its writhing poses, the Massacre, in particular, stands out as testament to Bonifacio's avant-garde enthusiasm for Mannerism.
- Ideas from abroad - notably the playful distortions of Italian Mannerism - eventually crowd into the tradition established by Van Eyck, upsetting its careful measure.
- Out of the art of the High Renaissance there developed a style characterized by a sense of extreme elegance and grace, which became known as Mannerism.
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