单词 | time-lapse |
释义 | time-lapsen. 1. An interval of time, esp. between two events; the passage of time; spec. an interval of time in the narrative of a play or film that is not represented in the action portrayed; a chronological break in the action. ΘΚΠ the world > time > [noun] > course or passage of time process1357 concoursec1400 coursec1460 successionc1485 passing-by1523 by-passing1526 slacka1533 continuancea1552 race1565 prolapse1585 current1587 decurse1593 passage1596 drifting1610 flux1612 effluxion1621 transcursion1622 decursion1629 devolution1629 progression1646 efflux1647 preterition1647 processus1648 decurrence1659 progress1664 fluxation1710 elapsing1720 currency1726 lapse1758 elapse1793 time-lapse1864 wearing1876 1864 Proc. Royal Soc. 1863–4 13 451 The time-error..remains, relatively to the whole time-lapse, as immaterially small as the inappreciable errors of the swifter rates of dropping. 1897 A. C. Spencer Geol. Massanutten Mountain 46 No idea of actual or even of relative time-lapse can be conveyed in this manner, but this is not requisite; for it is desired to show synchronism of events alone. 1903 Compressed Air 8 2289/1 The time lapse between the application of the brake on the first car and that of the last car..was three and one-half seconds longer. a1910 ‘M. Twain’ My Platonic Sweetheart in Harper's Monthly Mag. (1912) Dec. 15/2 There was Alice sitting by my side... There was no feeling of surprise; and there was no sense of a time-lapse; the ten years amounted to hardly even a yesterday. 1920 F. Palmer & E. Howard Photoplay Plot Encycl. 67 The long time lapse destroys the unity of the action and leads to no climax of any importance. 1926 A. Gaw Origin & Devel. 1 Henry VI 26 At his next appearance, an illusory shortening of the protracted time-lapse of the play occurs through Henry's words to Talbot. 1956 Kenyon Rev. 18 418 The time-lapse between any two primary stresses tends to be the same irrespective of the number of syllables..between them. 1974 Encycl. Brit. Micropædia II. 1024/3 Industries in which relatively large time lapses occur between the decision to produce and the finished product. 1998 G. Ritchie Lock, Stock & Two Smoking Barrels 134 (stage direct.) We cut to a time lapse. Hatchet puts down the phone while resting his bum on the front of his desk. 2003 R. Herring Talking Cock 213 The time lapse between injury and re-attachment should be less than six hours. 2. Time-lapse photography or cinematography (see Compounds); a facility for accomplishing this; a time-lapse film. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > the arts > visual arts > photography > [noun] > types or methods generally microphotography1857 pistolgraphy1860 portrait photography1864 pistolography1866 photochronography1887 snap-work1889 gallery-practice1891 photoreproduction1892 telephotography1892 Kodakry1893 fuzzyism1894 mugging1899 action photography1905 press photography1910 trick photography1913 Kodachrome1915 panchromatism1919 photo reporting1935 photojournalism1938 photo-reportage1939 strobe1949 streak photography1950 satellite photography1954 digital photography1972 time-lapse1975 1975 Pop. Mech. Dec. 61 The most exciting feature on these cameras is time-lapse, a slowing of the camera's shooting rate. 1984 Broadcast 7 Dec. 44/3 Nine different TV programmes playing simultaneously in time-lapse. 1993 R. Rucker et al. Mondo 2000 (U.K. ed.) 192/2 It originally made equipment for model rockets (a light-flasher so that you could take a time-lapse of your rocket's trajectory and estimate how fast it was going). 2001 Broadcast 26 Oct. 18/1 (advt.) Diverse subject categories include newsreels from 1895 to 1968,..home movies, timelapse and TV commercials. Compounds attributive. Designating the technique of taking a sequence of photographs at set time intervals to record events that occur imperceptibly slowly, so that when the resulting film is played at normal speed the action is speeded up and perceptible; relating to or used for this process. Esp. in time-lapse photography, time-lapse video. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > the arts > visual arts > photography > [adjective] > types or methods generally tithonographic1842 instantaneous1851 ferrotype1857 telephotographic1892 telephoto1893 telephotal1904 tabletop1914 time-lapse1926 multiflash1939 synchro-sunlight1940 tele1954 lowlight1984 1926 H. Green in Trans. Soc. Motion Picture & Television Engineers 26 147 (title) Apparatus for time lapse motion picture photography. 1927 E. G. Lutz Motion-picture Cameraman viii. 181 (caption) Camera with time-lapse mechanism invented by Mr. Howard Greene. 1929 Science 28 June 672/2 Very slow movements taken with the time lapse camera are translated into perceptible speeds. 1957 Pop. Mech. June 65 (caption) John Ott, who cast aside his career as a Chicago banker to pioneer time-lapse movies of flowers bursting into bloom. 1993 Radio Times 18 Sept. 67/5 With the help of stunning time-lapse photography, Professor David Suzuki looks at how body-building genes create a living animal from a single cell. 2006 Time Out N.Y. 16 Feb. 163/1 A mountain of background material is included, mostly notably a time-lapse video that compresses an 11-hour day on the set into two minutes and 16 seconds. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, March 2012; most recently modified version published online March 2022). < n.1864 |
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