释义 |
arts
art 1 A0440900 (ärt)n.1. a. The conscious use of the imagination in the production of objects intended to be contemplated or appreciated as beautiful, as in the arrangement of forms, sounds, or words.b. Such activity in the visual or plastic arts: takes classes in art at the college.c. Products of this activity; imaginative works considered as a group: art on display in the lobby.2. A field or category of art, such as music, ballet, or literature.3. A nonscientific branch of learning; one of the liberal arts.4. A skill that is attained by study, practice, or observation: the art of negotiation. See Synonyms at skill.5. a. arts Artful devices, stratagems, and tricks.b. Artful contrivance; cunning.6. Printing Illustrative material, especially in contrast to text. [Middle English, from Old French, from Latin ars, art-; see ar- in Indo-European roots.]
art 2 A0441000 (ərt; ärt when stressed)v. Archaic A second person singular present indicative of be. [Middle English, from Old English eart; see er- in Indo-European roots.]
ARTabbr. antiretroviral therapyarts (ɑːts) pl n1. (Art Terms) a. the arts imaginative, creative, and nonscientific branches of knowledge considered collectively, esp as studied academicallyb. (as modifier): an arts degree. 2. (Art Terms) See fine art3. cunning or crafty actions or plots; schemesThesaurusNoun | 1. | arts - studies intended to provide general knowledge and intellectual skills (rather than occupational or professional skills); "the college of arts and sciences"humanistic discipline, humanities, liberal artsdiscipline, field of study, subject area, subject field, bailiwick, subject, field, study - a branch of knowledge; "in what discipline is his doctorate?"; "teachers should be well trained in their subject"; "anthropology is the study of human beings"neoclassicism - revival of a classical style (in art or literature or architecture or music) but from a new perspective or with a new motivationclassicalism, classicism - a movement in literature and art during the 17th and 18th centuries in Europe that favored rationality and restraint and strict forms; "classicism often derived its models from the ancient Greeks and Romans"Romantic Movement, Romanticism - a movement in literature and art during the late 18th and early 19th centuries that celebrated nature rather than civilization; "Romanticism valued imagination and emotion over rationality"English - the discipline that studies the English language and literaturehistory - the discipline that records and interprets past events involving human beings; "he teaches Medieval history"; "history takes the long view"art history - the academic discipline that studies the development of painting and sculpturechronology - the determination of the actual temporal sequence of past eventsbeaux arts, fine arts - the study and creation of visual works of artperforming arts - arts or skills that require public performanceOccidentalism - the scholarly knowledge of western cultures and languages and peopleOriental Studies, Orientalism - the scholarly knowledge of Asian cultures and languages and peoplephilosophy - the rational investigation of questions about existence and knowledge and ethicsliterary study - the humanistic study of literaturelibrary science - the study of the principles and practices of library administrationphilology, linguistics - the humanistic study of language and literaturemusicology - the scholarly and scientific study of musicSinology - the study of Chinese history and language and culturestemmatics, stemmatology - the humanistic discipline that attempts to reconstruct the transmission of a text (especially a text in manuscript form) on the basis of relations between the various surviving manuscripts (sometimes using cladistic analysis); "stemmatology also plays an important role in musicology"; "transcription errors are of decisive importance in stemmatics"trivium - (Middle Ages) an introductory curriculum at a medieval university involving grammar and logic and rhetoric; considered to be a triple way to eloquencequadrivium - (Middle Ages) a higher division of the curriculum in a medieval university involving arithmetic and music and geometry and astronomy | Translationsart (aːt) noun1. painting and sculpture. I'm studying art at school; Do you like modern art?; (also adjective) an art gallery, an art college. 美術 美术2. any of various creative forms of expression. painting, music, dancing, writing and the other arts. 藝術 艺术3. an ability or skill; the (best) way of doing something. the art of conversation/war. 技術 技术ˈartful adjective clever; having a lot of skill (usually in a bad sense). an artful thief. 狡猾的 狡猾的ˈartfully adverb 狡猾地 狡猾地ˈartfulness noun 狡猾 狡猾arts noun plural (often with capital) languages, literature, history, as opposed to scientific subjects. 文科 文科IdiomsSeeartARTS
ARTS (navigation) automated radar terminal system Arts (religion, spiritualism, and occult)The very first human art we know about may have been inspired by religion. The cave paintings of ancient humans, such as those at Lascaux, France, discovered in 1940 and dating to approximately 30,000 BCE, inspire awe and wonder. What source of pigment and light did they use? Why travel a mile down into the bowels of the earth through dark, dank, dangerous passageways to produce these masterpieces? Cave art was possibly used in religious rites associated with hunting cultures. If they were offered to the gods of the hunt, as some archaeologists believe, the cave paintings would have been religiously inspired works of art, as opposed to the art of personal adornment. Since then, religion has continued to inspire art of all kinds. Bach, Handel, Beethoven, and Mozart are four composers among hundreds whose work is performed weekly in places of worship and regularly in secular concert halls as well. Michelangelo's paintings, not least the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel, attract thousands to Rome each year. Literary works like Ben-Hur, about a Palestinian Jew battling the Roman empire at the time of Jesus, still inspire Hollywood to make epic films. John Milton's Paradise Lost is required reading at colleges and universities. The Japanese form of Haiku poetry is a distinct part of Zen Buddhism, allowing bright but fragile images to pierce through a very strict literary form. Hindu goddess statues, even a very ancient figure in the lotus position, are still being uncovered by the archaeologist's brush. Because religious-inspired art was an early form of human expression and appears in all cultures, a good argument can be made that art is what makes us human, separates us from the rest of the animal kingdom, and provides a window through which we see that which is "other," spiritual, or eternal. In short, it can be said that art is a medium of expression by which we experience divinity. ARTS(Action Real-Time Strategy) See MOBA.ARTS
ARTS Arterial Revascularization Therapy Study. A trial comparing CABG and percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty (PTCA) in patients with multivessel coronary artery disease. Conclusion 1 year post-procedure, stenting for multivessel disease is less expensive than bypass surgery, with the same protection against death, stroke, and myocardial infarction. Cons There was a greater need for repeated procedures due to intrastent revascularisation in stented patients.FinancialSeeArtARTS
Acronym | Definition |
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ARTS➣Addiction Research and Treatment Services (Colorado) | ARTS➣Action Real Time Strategy (gaming) | ARTS➣AMEDD (Army Medical Department) Resource Tracking System | ARTS➣Advanced Robotics Technology and Systems (Italy) | ARTS➣American Radio Telephone System | ARTS➣Adaptive Restraint Technology System | ARTS➣Adaptive Restraint Technology System (vehicles) | ARTS➣Arts Recognition and Talent Search | ARTS➣Analog Real Time Synthesizer (audio framework) | ARTS➣Automated Radar Terminal System | ARTS➣Association of Retail Technology Standards | ARTS➣Automated Radar Tracking System | ARTS➣Archival and Retrieval System | ARTS➣Asphalt Rubber Technology Service (Clemson University) | ARTS➣All-purpose Remote Transport System | ARTS➣Accelerated Ray-Tracing System | ARTS➣Asynchronous Remote Takeover Server | ARTS➣Acquisition Requirements Tracking System (US Army) | ARTS➣Area Rapid Transit Service | ARTS➣Automatic Range Transponder System | ARTS➣Amen-Ra Theological Seminary | ARTS➣Advanced Rural Transportation System | ARTS➣Automated Remote Tracking Stations | ARTS➣Assured Real-Time Services | ARTS➣Advanced Real-Time Simulation (System) | ARTS➣Automatic Radar Terminal System | ARTS➣Army Training Study | ARTS➣Automated Resource Tracking System | ARTS➣Automated Resource Tracking System (NASA) | ARTS➣Appleton Resources for Teachers and Students | ARTS➣Anticipatory Reactor Trip System | ARTS➣Air Route Traffic System | ARTS➣Advanced Rid Tracking System | ARTS➣Aviation Resource Training System (US DoD) | ARTS➣Automated Regional Tracking System | ARTS➣Automated Requirements Tractability System | ARTS➣Automated Routine Testing System (Sprint) | ARTS➣Airborne Radar Target Simulator | ARTS➣Affordable Readiness Tracking System | ARTS➣Army Reports-Of-Discrepancy Tracking System | ARTS➣Advanced Records Technologies & Systems | ARTS➣Alignment Reference Transfer System (LODE) |
arts
Synonyms for artsnoun studies intended to provide general knowledge and intellectual skills (rather than occupational or professional skills)Synonyms- humanistic discipline
- humanities
- liberal arts
Related Words- discipline
- field of study
- subject area
- subject field
- bailiwick
- subject
- field
- study
- neoclassicism
- classicalism
- classicism
- Romantic Movement
- Romanticism
- English
- history
- art history
- chronology
- beaux arts
- fine arts
- performing arts
- Occidentalism
- Oriental Studies
- Orientalism
- philosophy
- literary study
- library science
- philology
- linguistics
- musicology
- Sinology
- stemmatics
- stemmatology
- trivium
- quadrivium
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