释义 |
artist
art·ist A0447300 (är′tĭst)n.1. One, such as a painter, sculptor, or writer, who is able by virtue of imagination and talent or skill to create works of aesthetic value, especially in the fine arts.2. A person whose work shows exceptional creative ability or skill: You are an artist in the kitchen.3. One, such as an actor or singer, who works in the performing arts.4. One who is adept at an activity, especially one involving trickery or deceit: a con artist. [French artiste, from Old French, lettered person, from Medieval Latin artista, from Latin ars, art-, art; see ar- in Indo-European roots.]artist (ˈɑːtɪst) n1. (Art Terms) a person who practises or is skilled in an art, esp painting, drawing, or sculpture2. (Art Terms) a person who displays in his work qualities required in art, such as sensibility and imagination3. (Art Terms) a person whose profession requires artistic expertise, esp a designer: a commercial artist. 4. (Professions) a person whose profession requires artistic expertise, esp a designer: a commercial artist. 5. a person skilled in some task or occupation: an artist at bricklaying. 6. obsolete an artisan7. slang a person devoted to or proficient in something: a booze artist; a con artist. art•ist (ˈɑr tɪst) n. 1. a person who practices or is proficient in one of the fine arts, esp. painting, sculpting, or drawing. 2. a person proficient in a performing art, as an actor or musician. 3. a person who exhibits exceptional skill. [1575–85; < Middle French artiste < Medieval Latin artista master of arts. See art1, -ist] syn: artist, artisan both refer to a person capable of superior workmanship or performance. An artist is a creative person who is skilled in one of the fine or performing arts: The concert featured a famous pianist and other noted artists. An artisan is one who is skilled in a craft or applied art that requires manual dexterity: carpentry done by skilled artisans. ThesaurusNoun | 1. | artist - a person whose creative work shows sensitivity and imaginationcreative personcreator - a person who grows or makes or invents thingsillustrator - an artist who makes illustrations (for books or magazines or advertisements etc.)classic - an artist who has created classic worksclassicist - an artistic person who adheres to classicismconstructivist - an artist of the school of constructivismornamentalist, decorator - someone who decoratesdraftsman, drawer - an artist skilled at drawingetcher - someone who etchesexpressionist - an artist who is an adherent of expressionismmaestro, master - an artist of consummate skill; "a master of the violin"; "one of the old masters"minimalist - a practitioner or advocate of artistic minimalismmodernist - an artist who makes a deliberate break with previous stylesmusician - artist who composes or conducts music as a professionpainter - an artist who paintslensman, photographer - someone who takes photographs professionallyPre-Raphaelite - a painter or writer dedicated to restoring early Renaissance idealsgraphic artist, printmaker - an artist who designs and makes printspyrographer - an artist who practices pyrographyromantic, romanticist - an artist of the Romantic Movement or someone influenced by Romanticismsculptor, sculpturer, statue maker, carver - an artist who creates sculpturesstylist - an artist who is a master of a particular stylesurrealist - an artist who is a member of the movement called surrealismsymbolist - a member of an artistic movement that expressed ideas indirectly via symbolsRobert Indiana, Indiana - United States pop artist (born 1928) |
artistnoun1. creator, master, maker, craftsman, artisan (obsolete), fine artist the studio of a great artist2. master, expert, pro (informal), ace (informal), genius, wizard, adept, maestro, virtuoso, grandmaster, doyen, past master, dab hand (Brit. informal), wonk (informal), maven (U.S.), fundi (S. African) He's an outstanding barber, an artist with shearsQuotations "The artist must be in his work as God is in creation, invisible and all-powerful; one must sense him everywhere but never see him" [Gustave Flaubert] "The true artist will let his wife starve, his children go barefoot, his mother drudge for his living at seventy, sooner than work at anything but his art" [George Bernard Shaw Man and Superman]Artists Agostino di Duccio (Italian), Josef Albers (German-U.S.), Leon Battista Alberti (Italian), Washington Allston (U.S.), Lawrence Alma-Tadema (Dutch-English), Albrecht Altdorfer (German), Fra Angelico (Italian), Pietro Annigoni (Italian), Antonello da Messina (Italian), Apelles (Greek), Karel Appel (Dutch), Aleksandr Porfiryevich Archipenko (Russian), Giuseppe Arcimboldo (Italian), Jean or Hans Arp (French), John James Audubon (U.S.), Frank Auerbach (English-German), Francis Bacon (Irish), Leon Nikolayevich Bakst (Russian), Balthus (Polish-French), Frédéric August Bartholdi (French), Fra Bartolommeo (Italian), Max Beckmann (German), Vanessa Bell (English), Giovanni Bellini (Italian), Thomas Hart Benton (U.S.), Gian Lorenzo Bernini (Italian), Joseph Beuys (German), Peter Blake (English), William Blake (English), Umberto Boccioni (Italian), David Bomberg (English), Rosa Bonheur (French), Pierre Bonnard (French), Richard Parkes Bonnington (English), Gutzon Borglum (U.S.), Hieronymus Bosch (Dutch), Sandro Botticelli (Italian), Francois Boucher (French), Eugène Boudin (French), Arthur Boyd (Australian), Donato Bramante (Italian), Constantin Brancusi (Romanian), Georges Braque (French), Brassaï (French), Agnolo Bronzino (Italian), Ford Madox Brown (English), Jan Brueghel (Flemish), Pieter Brueghel the Elder (Flemish), Pieter Brueghel the Younger (Flemish), Bernard Buffet (French), Edward Burne-Jones (English), Edward Burra (English), Reg Butler (English), Alexander Calder (U.S.), Callimachus (Greek), Robert Campin (Flemish), Antonio Canova (Italian), Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio (Italian), Anthony Caro (English), Vittore Carpaccio (Italian), Agostino Carracci (Italian), Annibale Carracci (Italian), Ludovico Carracci (Italian), Mary Cassatt (U.S.), Pietro Cavallini (Italian), Benvenuto Cellini (Italian), Lynn Chadwick (English), Marc Chagall (Russian-French), Philippe de Champaigne (French), Jean-Baptiste Siméon Chardin (French), Giorgio de Chirico (Italian), Giovanni Cimabue (Italian), Claude Lorrain (French), François Clouet (French), Jean Clouet (French), John Constable (English), John Copley (U.S.), Jean Baptiste Camille Corot (French), Antonio Allegri da Corregio (Italian), Gustave Courbet (French), David Cox (English), Antoine Coypel (French), Lucas Cranach (German), Walter Crane (English), John Crome (English), Aelbert Cuyp or Kuyp (Dutch), Paul Cézanne (French), Richard Dadd (English), Salvador Dalí (Spanish), Francis Danby (Irish), Charles François Daubigny (French), Honoré Daumier (French), Jacques Louis David (French), Peter de Wint (English), Hilaire Germain Edgar Degas (French), Eugène Delacroix (French), Paul Delaroche (French), Robert Delaunay (French), Paul Delvaux (Belgian), Maurice Denis (French), André Derain (French), William Dobell (Australian), Domenichino (Italian), Domenico del Barbiere (Italian), Donatello (Italian), Gerrit Dou (Dutch), George Russell Drysdale (Australian), Jean Dubuffet (French), Duccio di Buoninsegna (Italian), Marcel Duchamp (French-U.S.), Raoul Dufy (French), Albrecht Dürer (German), Thomas Eakins (U.S.), El Greco (Greek-Spanish), James Ensor (Belgian), Jacob Epstein (British), Max Ernst (German), Henri Fantin-Latour (French), Lyonel Feininger (U.S.), John Flaxman (English), Jean Fouquet (French), Jean Honoré Fragonard (French), Lucian Freud (English), Caspar David Friedrich (German), Roger Fry (English), Henry Fuseli (Swiss), Naum Gabo (Russian-U.S.), Thomas Gainsborough (English), Henri Gaudier-Brzeska (French), Paul Gauguin (French), Gentile da Fabriano (Italian), Lorenzo Ghiberti (Italian), Domenico Ghirlandaio (Italian), Alberto Giacometti (Swiss), Giambologna (Italian), Grinling Gibbons (Dutch), Gilbert (Proesch) and George (Passmore) (English), Eric Gill (English), Giorgione da Castelfranco (Italian), Giotto di Bondone (Italian), Giulio Romano (Italian), Hugo van der Goes (Flemish), Julio González (Spanish), Arshile Gorky (U.S.), Francisco de Goya (Spanish), Jan van Goyen (Dutch), Duncan Grant (Scottish), Jean Baptiste Greuze (French), Juan Gris (Spanish), Antoine Jean Gros (French), George Grosz (German-U.S.), Grünewald (German), Francesco Guardi (Italian), François Gérard (French), Théodore Géricault (French), Frans Hals (Dutch), Richard Hamilton (English), Ando Hiroshige (Japanese), Damien Hirst (English), Meindert Hobbema (Dutch), David Hockney (English), Hans Hofmann (German-U.S.), William Hogarth (English), Katsushika Hokusai (Japanese), Hans Holbein (German), Winslow Homer (U.S.), Pieter de Hooch or Hoogh (Dutch), Edward Hopper (U.S.), Jean Antoine Houdon (French), William Holman Hunt (English), Jean Auguste Dominique Ingres (French), Augustus John (Welsh), Gwen John (Welsh), Jasper Johns (U.S.), Johan Barthold Jongkind (Dutch), Jacob Jordaens (Flemish), Wassily Kandinsky (Russian), Angelica Kauffmann (Swiss), Ernst Ludwig Kirchner (German), Ron B. Kitaj (U.S.), Paul Klee (Swiss), Gustav Klimt (Austrian), Franz Kline (U.S.), Godfrey Kneller (German-English), Laura Knight (English), Oscar Kokoschka (Austrian), Willem de Kooning (Dutch-U.S.), Leon Kossoff (English), Georges de La Tour (French), Edwin Landseer (English), Thomas Lawrence (English), Charles Lebrun (French), Fernand Léger (French), Wilhelm Lehmbruck (German), Frederic Leighton (English), Peter Lely (Dutch-English), Leonardo da Vinci (Italian), Wyndham Lewis (British), Roy Lichtenstein (U.S.), Norman Alfred William Lindsay (Australian), Jacques Lipchitz (Lithuanian-U.S.), Filippino Lippi (Italian), L(awrence) S(tephen) Lowry (English), Lysippus (Greek), Jan Mabuse (Flemish), Charles Rennie Mackintosh (Scottish), René Magritte (Belgian), Aristide Maillol (French), Kasimir Severinovich Malevich (Russian), Edouard Manet (French), Andrea Mantegna (Italian), Franz Marc (German), John Martin (English), Simone Martini (Italian), Masaccio (Italian), Quentin Massys (Flemish), Henri Matisse (French), Hans Memling or Memlinc (Flemish), Franz Xavier Messerschmidt (Austrian), Ivan Mestrovic (Yugoslav-U.S.), Michelangelo Buonarroti (Italian), Michelozzi Michelozzo (Italian), John Everett Millais (English), Jean François Millet (French), Joan Miró (Spanish), Amedeo Modigliani (Italian), László Moholy-Nagy (Hungarian), Piet Mondrian (Dutch), Claude Oscar Monet (French), Henry Moore (British), Gustave Moreau (French), Berthe Morisot (French), William Morris (English), Samuel Finley Breese Morse (U.S.), Grandma Moses (U.S.), Edvard Munch (Norwegian), Alfred Munnings (English), Bartolomé Esteban Murillo (Spanish), Myron (Greek), Paul Nash (English), Ernst Wilhelm Nay (German), Barnett Newman (U.S.), Ben Nicholson (English), Sidney Nolan (Australian), Emil Nolde (German), Joseph Nollekens (Dutch-English), Georgia O'Keefe (U.S.), Claes Oldenburg (Swedish-U.S.), Orcagna (Italian), José Clemente Orozco (Mexican), Jean Baptiste Oudry (French), Palma Vecchio (Italian), Samuel Palmer (English), Eduardo Paolozzi (Scottish), Parmigianino (Italian), Victor Pasmore (English), Joachim Patinir or Patenier (Flemish), Perugino (Italian), Baldassare Peruzzi (Italian), Antoine Pevsner (Russian-French), Phidias (Greek), Francis Picabia (French), Pablo Picasso (Spanish), Piero della Francesca (Italian), Piero di Cosimo (Italian), Pietro da Cortona (Italian), Jean Baptiste Pigalle (French), Germain Pilon (French), Pinturicchio (Italian), John Piper (English), Pisanello (Italian), Andrea Pisano (Italian), Giovanni Pisano (Italian), Nicola Pisano (Italian), Camille Pissarro (French), Antonio del Pollaiuolo (Italian), Piero del Pollaiuolo (Italian), Jackson Pollock (U.S.), Polyclitus (Greek), Polygnotus (Greek), Pontormo (Italian), Paulus Potter (Dutch), Nicolas Poussin (French), Praxiteles (Greek), Pierre Paul Prud'hon (French), Pierre Puget (French), Pierre Puvis de Chavannes (French), Jacopa della Quercia (Italian), Arthur Rackham (English), Henry Raeburn (Scottish), Allan Ramsay (Scottish), Raphael (Italian), Robert Rauschenberg (U.S.), Man Ray (U.S.), Odilon Redon (French), Rembrandt Harmensz van Rijn (Dutch), Guido Reni (Italian), Pierre Auguste Renoir (French), Joshua Reynolds (English), José de Ribera (Spanish), Bridget Riley (English), Diego Rivera (Mexican), Andrea della Robbia (Italian), Luca della Robbia (Italian), Alexander Mikhailovich Rodchenko (Russian), Auguste Rodin (French), George Romney (English), Salvator Rosa (Italian), Dante Gabriel Rossetti (English), Mark Rothko (U.S.), Geroges Rouault (French), Louis-François Roubiliac or Roubillac (French), Henri Julien Rousseau (French), Théodore Rousseau (French), Peter Paul Rubens (Flemish), Rublyov or Rublev Andrei (Russian), Jacob van Ruisdael (Dutch), Philipp Otto Runge (German), Salomen van Ruysdael (Dutch), John Singer Sargent (U.S.), Egon Schiele (Austrian), Martin Schongauer (German), Kurt Schwitters (German), Scopas (Greek), Maurice Sendak (U.S.), Sesshu (Japanese), Georges Seurat (French), Ben Shahn (U.S.), Walter Richard Sickert (British), Paul Signac (French), Luca Signorelli (Italian), David Alfaro Siqueiros (Mexican), Alfred Sisley (French), John Sloan (U.S.), Claus Sluter (Dutch), David Smith (U.S.), Chaim Soutine (Lithuanian-French), Stanley Spencer (English), Jan Steen (Dutch), Veit Stoss (German), George Stubbs (English), Graham Sutherland (English), Yves Tanguy (French), Vladimir Tatlin (Russian), David Teniers the Elder (Flemish), David Teniers the Younger (Flemish), Gerard Ter Borch or Terborch (Dutch), Hendrik Terbrugghen (Dutch), James Thornhill (English), Bertel Thorvaldsen (Danish), Giambattista Tiepolo (Italian), Jacopo Tintoretto (Italian), James Jacques Joseph Tissot (French), Titian (Italian), Henri Marie Raymond de Toulouse-Lautrec (French), J(oseph) M(allord) W(illiam) Turner (English), Paolo Uccello (Italian), Utagawa Kuniyoshi (Japanese), Maurice Utrillo (French), Adriaen van de Velde (Dutch), Willem van de Velde the Elder (Dutch), Willem van de Velde the Younger (Dutch), Rogier van der Weyden (Flemish), Anthony Van Dyck (Flemish), Jan van Eyck (Flemish), Vincent van Gogh (Dutch), Victor Vasarely (Hungarian-French), Giorgio Vasari (Italian), Diego Rodríguez de Silva y Velázquez (Spanish), Jan Vermeer (Dutch), Paolo Veronese (Italian), Andrea del Verrocchio (Italian), Élisabeth Vigée-Lebrun (French), Jacques Villon (French), Maurice de Vlaminck (French), Andy Warhol (U.S.), Jean Antoine Watteau (French), George Frederick Watts (English), Benjamin West (U.S.), James Abbott McNeill Whistler (U.S.), Richard Wilson (Welsh), Joseph Wright (English), Xia Gui or Hsia Kuei (Chinese), Zeuxis (Greek), Johann Zoffany (German), Anders Zorn (Swedish), Gaetano Giulio Zumbo (Italian), Francisco Zurbarán (Spanish)Translationsartist (ˈaːtist) noun1. a person who paints pictures or is a sculptor or is skilled at one of the other arts. 美術家 美术家2. a singer, dancer, actor etc; an artiste. He announced the names of the artists who were taking part in the show. 藝術家 艺术家arˈtistic adjective1. liking or skilled in painting, music etc. She draws and paints – she's very artistic. 藝術(家)的 艺术(家)的 2. created or done with skill and good taste. That flower-arrangement looks very artistic. 具有藝術風格的 艺术性强的arˈtistically adverb 在藝術(風格)上 有艺术地,在艺术上 ˈartistry noun artistic skill. the musician's artistry. 藝術才華 艺术才能artist
con artist1. A person who exploits the vulnerability of others for their own sake by manipulating and taking advantage of their confidence (the act of which is known as a confidence trick or game). It is the common abbreviation of the full term, "confidence artist." Be wary of con artists who send emails claiming to be a bank or some other trustworthy establishment: they often ask for your personal bank details to have access to your finances.2. By extension, a person who is skilled at duplicity, cajolery, or self-serving manipulation or persuasion. John is such a con artist, always convincing others to pay for him on nights out under the pretense that he'll "pay them back later."See also: artist, concon man1. A man who exploits the vulnerability of others for his own sake by manipulating and taking advantage of their confidence (the act of which is known as a confidence trick or game). It is the common abbreviation of the full term, "confidence man." Be wary of con men who send emails claiming to be a bank or some other trustworthy establishment: they often ask for your personal bank details so as to have access to your finances.2. By extension, a man who is skilled at duplicity, cajolery, or self-serving manipulation or persuasion. John is such a con man, always convincing others to pay for him on nights out under the pretense that he'll "pay them back later."See also: con, manfast buck1. noun Money made quickly and/or without effort, often through dishonest, unscrupulous, or ethically dubious means. Often used in the phrase "make/earn a fast buck." The people hawking T-shirts commemorating the tragedy are just looking to make a fast buck.2. adjective Concerned with making money quickly, easily, and (often) unscrupulously. Often used to modify the word "artist," thus implying the individual is a swindler to some degree. In this usage, it is usually hyphenated. All of these Wall Street investors are just a bunch of fast-buck artists, if you ask me. Before the economic crash, a huge amount of fast-buck speculators were selling over-inflated loans to people for property that was essentially worthless.See also: buck, fastpiss-artist1. rude slang One who falsely claims to have knowledge about a topic. Primarily heard in UK, Australia. That message board is filled with nothing but piss-artists who think they know everything.2. rude slang One who is often drunk. I advised Jenny not to date that piss-artist because he drinks his money away at the bar every night.be a (something) to (one's) fingertipsTo be a particular thing to the utmost degree. Oh, I'm a student to my fingertips—that's why I'm now pursuing a doctorate.See also: fingertipborn to (be or do something)Possessing an innate talent or ability in a particular area. When that young girl walked into the audition and flawlessly belted out a Whitney Houston song without the slightest hesitation, I knew she was born to be a singer. You were born to be an artist, so I don't know why you're wasting your time working on Wall Street.See also: bornbullshit artistrude slang Someone who is apt to lie and embellish. Oh, you can't trust a word that bullshit artist says.See also: artist, bullshita flimflam artistSomeone who acts deceptively and tries to trick people. The word "flimflam" is thought to be of Scandinavian origin. I suspect those guys are flimflam artists, that's why they want so much money up front.See also: artist, flimflampick-up artistA man devoted to using a specific set of strategies in order to seduce ("pick up") women, and who perhaps instructs other men in how to do the same. You know how everyone tells you to just be yourself when talking to a girl? Well, a pick-up artist will tell you to do the opposite.See also: artistbooze artistOne who is drunk or apt to get drunk. I was quite a booze artist in college, but those days are long behind me. All right, let's get this booze artist some coffee—something to sober him up.See also: artist, boozecastor oil artistA doctor. I don't believe anything that castor oil artist says—there's no way my blood pressure is that high.See also: artist, oilmakeout artistSomeone who tries to seduce other people; someone who pursues brief or short-term sexual encounters with others. Sometimes hyphenated as "make-out artist." I gained a bit of a reputation as a makeout artist in my first couple of years in college because I found it very easy to hook up with various guys around campus. If you're looking for a serious relationship, a make-out artist like him will only let you down.See also: artistrip-off artistA person who exploits the vulnerability of others for their own sake by manipulating and taking advantage of their confidence. Be wary of rip-off artists who send emails claiming to be a bank and asking for your online login information. He's just a small-time rip-off artist looking to con you into giving him a bit of money.See also: artisttake-off artistslang A thief, especially a mugger or robber. My dad always made it known that he kept a shotgun and a baseball bat behind the counter to ward off would-be take-off artists. The guy is a take-off artist. He used to walk around town posing as a foreigner, then he'd stop people on the street to ask for directions, pull a gun on them, and make off with their valuables.See also: artisthype artistslang Someone who promotes someone or something, often in an aggressive or excessive manner. Dave's a hype artist for student council—of course he's going to try to get us to go to their event.See also: artist, hype(rip-)off artistInf. a con artist. Fred is such an off artist. Beware of the rip-off artist who runs that shop.See also: artist, offtake-off artistSl a thief. (Underworld.) A take-off artist known as the Cat is cleaning out closets and jewelry boxes all over town. He's not a sales agent. He's a takeoff artist, pure and simple.See also: artistbullshit artistAlso, bull artist. A person who habitually exaggerates, flatters, or talks nonsense. For example, Don't believe a word of it-he's a bullshit artist. Both versions are considered vulgar slang. The first dates from the 1940s, the second from the World War I period. See also: artist, bullshitfast buckMoney made quickly and easily and, often, dishonestly. For example, He's all right, but his partner is just out for a fast buck. This expression gave rise to fast-buck artist for an individual, especially a swindler, intent on making money quickly. [Slang; mid-1900s] Also see easy money. See also: buck, fastartist n. a combining form meaning specialist. For specific meanings go to booze artist; bullshit artist; burn artist; castor oil artist; con artist; flimflam artist; hype artist; make-out artist; off artist; (rip-)off artist; take-off artist.booze artist n. a drunken person; a drunkard. A wobbly booze artist sat musing on the stool in the corner. See also: artist, boozebullshit artist and bullshitter n. a person expert at lies, deception, and hype. (see also bullshit. Usually objectionable.) What can you expect from a bullshit artist? The truth? Listen to me. Don’t ever try to bullshit a bullshitter! See also: artist, bullshitburn artist n. someone who cheats or harms someone else; an informer. (Underworld.) Never trust a known burn artist. See also: artist, burncastor oil artist n. a medical doctor. This two-bit castor oil artist tried to get me to lose weight. See also: artist, oilcon man and con artist n. someone who makes a living by swindling people. Gary is a con artist, but at least he’s not on the dole. I was taken by a real con man! See also: con, mancon artist verbSee con manSee also: artist, conflimflam artist n. someone who practices confidence tricks or deceptions on someone else. I don’t trust that flimflam artist at all. See also: artist, flimflamhype artist n. someone who produces aggressive promotional material for a living. She is a hype artist for a public relations firm. See also: artist, hypemake-out artist n. a seducer; a lecher, usually a male. (see also lady-killer.) He might have been a make-out artist in his youth, but I doubt it. See also: artistfast buck verbSee quick buckSee also: buck, fast(rip-)off artist n. a con artist. Beware of the rip-off artist who runs that shop. See also: artistoff artist verbSee rip-off artistSee also: artist, offtake-off artist n. a thief. (Underworld.) A take-off artist known as the Cat is cleaning out closets and jewelry boxes all over town. See also: artistflimflam artistA swindler. Flimflam artist indulged in confidence games in which the victim is persuaded to buy worthless property. These crooks go after bigger game than street hustlers, card sharps, or bait and switchers do because of the time and preparation that their scams require. “Flimflam” has been traced back to a Scandinavian word, although folk etymology has come up with a connection to an early 20th-century New York City law firm of dubious reputation, Flam & Flam.See also: artist, flimflamArtist
Artist a Russian journal of the theater, music, and the arts. It was published in Moscow from 1889 to 1895 during the theater season (seven issues per year). In 1892 and 1893 the journal published a supplement, Dnevnik “Artista” (The “Artist’s” Diary), that came out in the summer months. Artist printed articles, reviews, dramatic works, novellas, short stories, memoirs, and monographs, as well as theater listings, news items, bibliographies, and reproductions of paintings by famous artists. What does it mean when you dream about an artist?Artists are natural symbols of creativity. Dreaming of an artist at work may indicate a repressed desire, and possibly a potential talent, to express oneself in a creative arena. ARTIST
ARTIST Angioplasty versus Rotational Atherectomy for Treatment of Diffuse In-STent Restenosis. A trial comparing balloon angioplasty (percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty, or PTCA) alone with rotational atherectomy (ROTA) followed by adjunct low-pressure ≤6 atm–balloon angioplasty in patients with diffuse in-stent restenosis. Conclusion In patients with diffuse in-stent restenosis, PTCA alone has better outcomes than ROTA.ARTIST
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ARTIST➣Advanced Real Time Systems | ARTIST➣Arctic Radiation and Turbulence Interaction Study (est. 1999) | ARTIST➣Austrian Radionavigation Technology and Integrated Satnav Services and Products Testbed | ARTIST➣Arts Research and Training Institute in Southern Tagalog (Philippines; est. 1987) | ARTIST➣Advanced Radar Technology Integrated System Testbed (Joint US and UK effort) | ARTIST➣Advanced Reasoning Tool for model-based diagnosis of Industrial SysTems | ARTIST➣Acid-Related Thioesterase Involved in Steroidogenesis |
artist
Synonyms for artistnoun creatorSynonyms- creator
- master
- maker
- craftsman
- artisan
- fine artist
noun masterSynonyms- master
- expert
- pro
- ace
- genius
- wizard
- adept
- maestro
- virtuoso
- grandmaster
- doyen
- past master
- dab hand
- wonk
- maven
- fundi
Synonyms for artistnoun a person whose creative work shows sensitivity and imaginationSynonymsRelated Words- creator
- illustrator
- classic
- classicist
- constructivist
- ornamentalist
- decorator
- draftsman
- drawer
- etcher
- expressionist
- maestro
- master
- minimalist
- modernist
- musician
- painter
- lensman
- photographer
- Pre-Raphaelite
- graphic artist
- printmaker
- pyrographer
- romantic
- romanticist
- sculptor
- sculpturer
- statue maker
- carver
- stylist
- surrealist
- symbolist
- Robert Indiana
- Indiana
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