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单词 poeticize
释义

Definition of poeticize in English:

poeticize

(British poeticise)
verb pəʊˈɛtɪsʌɪzpoʊˈɛdəˌsaɪz
[with object]
  • 1Make poetic in character.

    使有诗意

    the scenes are poeticized as we see them, but this doesn't strike a false note
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Not trying to demonize him or - as some have done - poeticize him, he gives us a common but not unduly vulgar man, with brightness and obtuseness intermingled.
    • Mayor Woolstencroft poeticized these sentiments saying, ‘It is as if the world holds its breath as we make these remarks… Today, we turn more than sod; we turn a page in our community's history.’
    • I put unrelated items together in a context that poeticizes them.
    • Who gave her anything close to the right to poeticize this death and this mother's slow disintegration?
    • The central question is: does Almodovar's Bunuelian surreality, however restrained here, heighten and poeticise the sexual issues?
    • Some films answer this question by poeticizing realism (Throne of Blood, Kwaidan), through irony and humaneness (Star Wars, Chinese Ghost Story), or by just giving up believability (Charlie's Angels, Wong Jing's wackier films).
    • As in Talk to Her, Almodóvar attempts to poeticize irresponsible behavior and to shock us into awareness of the outer limits of the human condition.
    • Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind spiritualizes film by novelizing it and poeticizing it at the same time.
    • When, in his Essay on Man, Alexander Pope wrote that hope springs eternal in the human breast, he was merely poeticizing a function of blind genetic material.
    • Many writers have tried to poeticize drug abuse, to portray their habits as fanciful rather than merely destructive.
    • Tsai poeticizes space not by probing it-his oeuvre is noticeably lacking in pans, zooms, and dollies-but by making space itself his medium, manipulating its grammar the way a poet might play with diction and sentence structure.
    • I know it looks like the old positivist duality, but it does give some insight into the way that political romanticism poeticizes politics.
    • She's his posthumous enabler, cutting him plenty of slack for his male needs, allowing him to poeticize his libido, making his affair with Wevill an artistic necessity.
    1. 1.1no object Write or speak poetically.
      用诗写;用诗表达
      an ageing academic with a tendency to poeticize
      Example sentencesExamples
      • He could poeticize for hours about the ‘fluorescent orbs.’
      • The millions of lives lost - to disease, revolt, and suicide - in the months at sea between Dahomey and the plantations of the New World need picturing and sorrow songs more than a lugubrious poeticizing of hyena gods.
      • And that's the point: the main character, a young Dutch artist, fantasises and poeticises about a Japanese girl to wrench himself out of his cramping bohemian existence.
      • One remaining issue perhaps needs a little comment to elaborate the contrast between poeticising and ideologising the reading of a text, or the listening to the patient.
      • To say that the narrator gives the story is a bit misleading, since the narrator who poeticizes wild and atmospheric as he leads the audience from one scene to the next, and it is in these scenes that the developing narrative is exposed.
      • The more Clausewitz poeticizes, the more convinced the reader is that friction is in fact paramount in war, theory nothing.

Derivatives

  • poeticism

  • noun pəʊˈɛtɪsɪz(ə)mpoʊˈɛdəˌsɪz(ə)m
    mass noun
    • 1Poetic style or character.

      使有诗意

      her words have a simple poeticism
      1. 1.1count noun A poetic expression.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • The instrumentation on the record has a strange sensuality to it, acting as kind of redemptive salve and counterpoint to the jagged poeticism of the lyrics.
      • One needs to try to avoid poeticism where possible.
      • There wasn't an appreciable sonic variation, other than perhaps a touch more slide guitar weaving through the aching poeticisms on the second, and stronger, offering.
      • a speech replete with maudlin poeticisms

Definition of poeticize in US English:

poeticize

(British poeticise)
verbpoʊˈɛdəˌsaɪzpōˈedəˌsīz
[with object]
  • 1Make poetic in character.

    使有诗意

    the scenes are poeticized as we see them, but this doesn't strike a false note
    Example sentencesExamples
    • I know it looks like the old positivist duality, but it does give some insight into the way that political romanticism poeticizes politics.
    • Mayor Woolstencroft poeticized these sentiments saying, ‘It is as if the world holds its breath as we make these remarks… Today, we turn more than sod; we turn a page in our community's history.’
    • Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind spiritualizes film by novelizing it and poeticizing it at the same time.
    • She's his posthumous enabler, cutting him plenty of slack for his male needs, allowing him to poeticize his libido, making his affair with Wevill an artistic necessity.
    • Some films answer this question by poeticizing realism (Throne of Blood, Kwaidan), through irony and humaneness (Star Wars, Chinese Ghost Story), or by just giving up believability (Charlie's Angels, Wong Jing's wackier films).
    • Tsai poeticizes space not by probing it-his oeuvre is noticeably lacking in pans, zooms, and dollies-but by making space itself his medium, manipulating its grammar the way a poet might play with diction and sentence structure.
    • As in Talk to Her, Almodóvar attempts to poeticize irresponsible behavior and to shock us into awareness of the outer limits of the human condition.
    • When, in his Essay on Man, Alexander Pope wrote that hope springs eternal in the human breast, he was merely poeticizing a function of blind genetic material.
    • The central question is: does Almodovar's Bunuelian surreality, however restrained here, heighten and poeticise the sexual issues?
    • Many writers have tried to poeticize drug abuse, to portray their habits as fanciful rather than merely destructive.
    • Who gave her anything close to the right to poeticize this death and this mother's slow disintegration?
    • Not trying to demonize him or - as some have done - poeticize him, he gives us a common but not unduly vulgar man, with brightness and obtuseness intermingled.
    • I put unrelated items together in a context that poeticizes them.
    1. 1.1no object Write or speak poetically.
      用诗写;用诗表达
      an ageing academic with a tendency to poeticize
      Example sentencesExamples
      • One remaining issue perhaps needs a little comment to elaborate the contrast between poeticising and ideologising the reading of a text, or the listening to the patient.
      • He could poeticize for hours about the ‘fluorescent orbs.’
      • And that's the point: the main character, a young Dutch artist, fantasises and poeticises about a Japanese girl to wrench himself out of his cramping bohemian existence.
      • The millions of lives lost - to disease, revolt, and suicide - in the months at sea between Dahomey and the plantations of the New World need picturing and sorrow songs more than a lugubrious poeticizing of hyena gods.
      • The more Clausewitz poeticizes, the more convinced the reader is that friction is in fact paramount in war, theory nothing.
      • To say that the narrator gives the story is a bit misleading, since the narrator who poeticizes wild and atmospheric as he leads the audience from one scene to the next, and it is in these scenes that the developing narrative is exposed.
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更新时间:2024/12/27 14:22:11