单词 | conventionalise |
例句 | He becomes a sort of hollow, posing dummy, the conventionalised figure of a sahib. Did George Orwell shoot an elephant? His 1936 'confession' – and what it might mean 2017-03-18T04:00:00Z In the later and more refined forms of worship, the ruder types were highly conventionalised, and replaced by a more intricate and less obvious symbolism. Ancient Pagan and Modern Christian Symbolism With an Essay on Baal Worship, On The Assyrian Sacred "Grove," And Other 2012-01-05T03:00:28.663Z The dialect and local humours of South Italy were engrafted on types conventionalised in Lombard provinces. The Memoirs of Count Carlo Gozzi; Volume the First 2011-12-12T03:00:27.507Z This is one of our methods of conventionalising Shakespeare. Oxford Lectures on Poetry 2011-07-19T02:00:15.897Z Spears, cross-bows, and water-vessels hung from the walls, with boards on which were human figures, pigs, fish, fowls, and palm trees, all very well drawn, and not conventionalised in design. In the Andamans and Nicobars The Narrative of a Cruise in the Schooner "Terrapin" 2011-06-30T02:00:24.487Z Statues are conventionalised, decorative scrolls exaggerated, figures turned into columns for good reasons, and in the result successfully. Arts and Crafts Essays by Members of the Arts and Crafts Exhibition Society 2011-05-30T02:00:17.247Z In the former, the emblem of the trinity, which we have been obliged to conventionalise, is shown in a distinct manner. Ancient Pagan and Modern Christian Symbolism With an Essay on Baal Worship, On The Assyrian Sacred "Grove," And Other 2012-01-05T03:00:28.663Z And the common pictograph to represent the Arikara among all the surrounding tribes was a conventionalised ear of corn. A Book Written by the Spirits of the So-Called Dead 2011-05-03T02:00:17.413Z This poem, however, even when thoroughly conventionalised, would remain, as I said, a pretty thing; and it could scarcely excite derision. Oxford Lectures on Poetry 2011-07-19T02:00:15.897Z Then this figure, more or less reduced or conventionalised, served to indicate not only the term man, but the full sound man, as in the word manifest, and in the modern rebus. Man, Past and Present 2011-03-28T02:00:29.283Z And the art of learning how to choose, and what to choose, and how to carry out my will, is for me, since I am gregarious, imitative, and conventionalised, a social art. The Sources Of Religious Insight In South Germany one often meets with musical instruments which are inlaid with conventionalised floral forms. Intarsia and Marquetry As has been pointed out, almost every object drawn is partly conventionalised, in the most skilful manner, so as to make it fit its place as a piece of a decorative system. Architecture Classic and Early Christian Elsewhere the spirit of concession to alien ideas is almost unknown, even flower and leaf being conventionalised on those architectural monuments of Islam which form the supreme expression of Mussulman genius. Through the Malay Archipelago They are often mere conventionalised reductions of pictorial prototypes, comparable, for instance, to the characters of our alphabets, which are known to be degraded forms of earlier pictographs. Man, Past and Present 2011-03-28T02:00:29.283Z They, if they did not introduce the thing—which is, after all, as the old waterman in Jacob Faithful says, "Human natur',"—established and conventionalised the Silvius and Phoebe relation of lover and mistress. A History of the French Novel, Vol. 1 From the Beginning to 1800 Percier, the artist, helped with the painting, but the throne itself was David’s and shows his talent in the floating Victory of the back and the conventionalised wreaths of the seat. The Tapestry Book For decorative purposes it is almost always necessary to conventionalise to a greater or less extent whatever is represented. Architecture Classic and Early Christian The principal designs for the Venetian lace of all periods were scrolls of flowers conventionalised in the Renaissance taste of the time. Chats on Old Lace and Needlework The pictographs were conventionalised and reduced to their present form, but still remained ideograms supplemented by a limited number of phonetic determinants. Man, Past and Present 2011-03-28T02:00:29.283Z Evidently there is much sophistication, not to say conventionalised affectation, in all this national attachment and allegiance. An Inquiry Into The Nature Of Peace And The Terms Of Its Perpetuation They are not easy, and they will be made more and more hard by the rubbed-out, conventionalised coinage of our language. Some Diversions of a Man of Letters Though not subjected to any serious canon, the predecessors of Donatello seemed at one time in danger of becoming conventionalised. Donatello, by Lord Balcarres It was really the decorative expansion of it; the conventionalising of exaggerated realism. Masques & Phases In each corner is a smaller flower—conventionalised forms probably of honeysuckle and rose—joined together by curving stems of gold cord, filled out with leaves and arabesques, all together forming a very decorative panel. English Embroidered Bookbindings Greenwich will not straighten its streets nor conventionalise its views. Greenwich Village There are also the concentric circles, the conventionalised spiral, and the meander design, so common among the North American Indians, and still in use among the Moquis. Unknown Mexico, Volume 1 (of 2) A Record of Five Years' Exploration Among the Tribes of the Western Sierra Madre; In the Tierra Caliente of Tepic and Jalisco; and Among the Tarascos of Michoacan Dining-rooms and chimney-pieces are often very appropriately decorated in this way; the words running on scrolls which are half unrolled and half hidden, and showing a conventionalised background of fruit and flowers. Principles of Home Decoration With Practical Examples Facial expression could not be seen in so large a theatre; and the actors therefore wore masks, conventionalised to represent the dominant mood of a character during a scene. The Theory of the Theatre Such at least was the case with the statuary of the Old Empire, before the conventionalised art of a later day had placed restrictions on the sculptor and stifled his originality. Early Israel and the Surrounding Nations The very last piece of bench-work this season was the trailed end of a blackberry-vine, most daringly conventionalised in hammered iron, flung down on the frosty grass an instant before people came to look. Letters of Travel (1892-1913) Manners, we are told, are in part an elaboration of gesture, and in part they are symbolical and conventionalised survivals representing former acts of dominance or of personal service or of personal contact. Theory of the Leisure Class Robertson indicates the conventionalised gesture of life; Hauptmann its moral and spiritual density. The Dramatic Works of Gerhart Hauptmann Volume I Our acts so easily become defaced and conventionalised, mere uniform counters that have been used a thousand times before and rarely with any special applicability—often, indeed, a flagrant inapplicability—to the case in hand. Impressions and Comments The old conventionalised art of Egypt was cast aside, and an attempt was made to imitate nature, exactly, even to the verge of caricature. Early Israel and the Surrounding Nations It was not, perhaps, the real Englishman or American who had been considered, but a forestière conventionalised from the Florentine's observation of many Anglo-Saxons. Indian Summer Similarly, our bearing towards superiors, and in great measure towards equals, expresses a more or less conventionalised attitude of subservience. Theory of the Leisure Class Thus, though we conventionalise practice, we never conventionalise dogma. The Fair Haven It is technically crude, childishly conventionalised, wrought with an enforced economy of means. Impressions and Comments It was fragrant with rose petals and the conventionalised rose, in gold and white, that was stamped in place of a monogram, didn't escape me. Old Rose and Silver The extremities of the two lines converged on an oval-topped doorway, very large, having above it a design conventionalised from the three-leafed clover. The Blind Spot There was just a limited and conventionalised use of colour, in effect, upon the marble. Greek Studies: a Series of Essays Each extremity of the outer surface is covered by a similarly conventionalised face-pattern on a smaller scale. The Pagan Tribes of Borneo We criticised the current code, how muddled and conventionalised it had become, how modified by subterfuges and concealments and new necessities, and the increasing freedom of women. The New Machiavelli It will be noticed that the eye is the most constant feature about which the rest of the pattern is commonly centred; but that the eye also disappears from some of the most conventionalised. The Pagan Tribes of Borneo This ignorance of the origin of the pattern is naturally true only of the more conventionalised examples, whether of the dog or other natural forms. The Pagan Tribes of Borneo They seem to be conventionalised derivatives from these animal forms. The Pagan Tribes of Borneo And in yet another case we saw that a Kayan house is decorated with conventionalised carvings of some animal whose species has been forgotten by the community. The Pagan Tribes of Borneo In my contempt for vulgarised and conventionalised honour I had forgotten that for me there was such a reality as honour. The New Machiavelli A large proportion of them obviously are conventionalised derivatives from animal forms. The Pagan Tribes of Borneo Carved dogs, comparatively little conventionalised, are sometimes used as the supports of low platforms upon which the chiefs may sit on ceremonious occasions. The Pagan Tribes of Borneo |
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