单词 | serialize |
释义 | serializev. 1. transitive. To arrange in or into a series. ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > order > order, sequence, or succession > arrange in sequence or series [verb (transitive)] filec1470 settle1551 serialize1852 seriate1878 sequence1954 1852 Daily News 24 May 5/1 We understand that the various orders of architecture, instructively serialised, are to be used in the ornamentation of the grounds. 1907 W. James Pragmatism v. 172 To frame some system of concepts mentally classified, serialized, or connected in some intellectual way. 1948 B. Gitlow Whole of their Lives iv. 142 How did the United States treasury serialize and number the bills? 2002 M. T. Davis in N. Y. Wu Ad Quadratum viii. 186 Master builders sought to regulate and serialize production of constituent elements, from ashlar blocks of the wall to window mullions. 2. a. intransitive. Of a story, etc.: to be published in serial form; to appear as a serial. Now rare. ΚΠ 1888 Chronicle (Univ. Michigan) 17 Nov. 83/1 Modern literature is demonstrating a most astonishing tendency to serialize. 1899 Westm. Budget 6 Oct. 10/2 It [sc. a story] will serialise in the five Continents, and the dramatic rights alone should give us a month at Brighton. 1908 J. Conrad Let. 16 Jan. (1990) IV. 25 Even if Chance takes 6 months more—even if it does not serialize at all you will have upwards of £500 to put to my credit when the MS is completed. b. transitive. To publish (a story, etc.) as a serial; to publish the work of (an author) in serial form. Later also: to make into a serial for broadcast. ΘΚΠ society > communication > printing > publishing > publish [verb (transitive)] > publish in serial form serialize1892 society > communication > broadcasting > [verb (transitive)] > broadcast in serial form serialize1971 1892 Author July 48/2 If a story is serialized in England and is not serialized simultaneously in the States, the American copyright is of course seriously jeopardised. 1923 S. Hocking My Bk. of Memory xiii. 186 I submitted it to other editors who had serialized my stories, but with the same result. 1954 K. Amis Let. 20 Dec. (2000) 418 Some digger rag in Melbourne wants to serialise Jim. a1965 A. Christie Autobiogr. (1977) viii. 414 I was beginning to be serialised in America... The money..[was] far larger than anything I ever made from serial rights in Britain. 1971 Guardian 2 Mar. 9/3 The paperback sales of Compton Mackenzie's ‘Sinister Street’ jumped from a steady annual 2,000 to 16,000 when BBC-2 serialised the book. 2005 Guardian 29 Jan. (Review section) 14/1 It could be the title of one of those cute and anecdotal history books, often serialised on Radio 4. 3. transitive. Music. To compose or treat in accordance with the principles of serial music. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > the arts > music > composing music > compose [verb (transitive)] > specific type of music epithalamize1802 serialize1959 1959 Listener 8 Oct. 564/1 The fashionable Webernites went on to serialize not only the notes themselves, but the silences, the durations, the dynamic indications..all by the number twelve. 1985 J. Kerman Musicol. 21 Milton Babbitt conceived of and composed the first piece of music with durations serialized as well as pitches in 1947. 2002 Tempo No. 221. 64/1 This later music is still organized in adherence to the principles of serialism, but with a vastly expanded definition of the ‘parameters’ to be serialized. Derivatives ˈserialized adj. ΘΚΠ society > communication > printing > publishing > [adjective] > published in serial form serial1835 serialized1902 1902 Bk. Buyer June 389/1 Indeed, one of the great causes of these serialized books is the immense advance which has been made in color printing from process-blocks. 1921 Public Opinion 26 Aug. 204/2 Take the average short story, or serialised novel, and test it for the real wisdom involved. 1976 A. Sheridan-Smith tr. J.-P. Sartre Critique of Dialectical Reason i. iv. 312 This serialised antagonism..constitutes an initial structure of alterity. 2011 Independent 17 Jan. 9/1 The anguished wait for the latest tranche of Alastair Campbell's Downing Street memoirs is over... From the serialised snippets it looks a belter. ˈserializing adj. and n. ΚΠ 1857 H. Clapp tr. C. Fourier Social Destiny i. iv. 32 The primary functions of the three Regulative or Serializing Faculties. 1891 World (N.Y.) 15 Nov. 26/5 The occasional book publications without previous serializing that occur in the West and elsewhere. 1903 H. James Better Sort 411 She saw him as a hunted hero cleverly drawn in one of the serialising weeklies. 1961 Ch'ên Shou-Yi Chinese Lit. xxxi. 598 The facilities of the daily and periodical presses provided new opportunities for serializing of publications. 2004 G. Lay Miss Tutti Frutti Contest v. 65 A serialising novelist who depended on episodic publication to provide his income. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, March 2013; most recently modified version published online March 2022). < v.1852 |
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