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单词 thematize
释义

Definition of thematize in English:

thematize

(British thematise)
verb ˈθiːmətʌɪzˈTHēməˌtīz
[with object]
  • 1Present or select (a subject) as a theme.

    Shelley's imagery is systematic whenever light is being thematized
    Example sentencesExamples
    • His text thus thematizes the cultural and political limitations of racialized bio-politics, as well as its role in sustaining and, at the same time, slowly eroding colonial governance.
    • Throughout the twentieth century language was thematized in Ireland.
    • Unlike any of these works, however, the books I want to examine here all explicitly thematize their structure.
    • Moreover, Joutel's text thematizes these problems of communication in complex, literary ways, in scenes that show how misunderstanding and prevarication were inescapable among the Frenchmen, not just between them and the natives.
    • Sicily is depicted as a multiple reality in their novels, which thematise the complexity of Sicily and of being Sicilian.
    • The fate of system then becomes an event in the novel's narrative and can thus be thematized.
    • Thus, on some level, Verrocchio's design may also thematize the much-contested sense of touch and, indirectly, the art of sculpture itself.
    • But Colombo immediately thematises the narrator's sense of being a stranger in a strange land, which only heightens on his arrival in the U.S.
    • His lyrics thematize the painful rift between the private and public persona, the heartbreak that grows from a passionate romance that founders on the incomprehension or outright hostility of an insensitive culture.
    • However, the Fogg portrait is remarkable because of the way in which it thematizes the performance of self-representation - the makeup of identity - in a considered and striking manner, as a form of art making.
    • Condé's novel thus thematizes a crucial link between the experience of unresolved grief and the articulation of social and political grievances.
    • The portrait thematizes and celebrates the very issues for which Boucher was criticized.
    • Through political protest, social movements capture the world's attention, thematize injustice, and articulate visions of freedom and equality beyond the bottom line.
    • Not only does Nebreda explicitly thematise his own diagnosis as schizophrenic, but he also associates the bodily practices depicted throughout with schizophrenia.
    • In contrast with the long tradition of sepulchral poetry that preceded it, the poem thematizes that eminently modern concept, the nation.
    • Combining thematic and biographical approaches, this study will review the strategies gay and lesbian performers used to thematize their own difference.
    • I am aware of the fact that one can be deeply interested in power without expressly thematizing the topic and using the concept.
    • Once thematized sufficiently for his purposes, however, the topic was quickly abandoned by Descartes.
    • The various stories thematize issues of colorism, marital betrayal, family strife, and poverty.
    • This passage explicitly thematizes the way human temporality is experienced as some form of spatial movement - how space transforms into time.
    • She thematizes language and the telling of one's own story by using jazz-influenced African American speech as an aesthetic device to unite collective memory and recollections with current realities.
    • But the novel also tells the story of the dissolution of satire; in it Waugh both thematizes and enacts the breakdown of the comic-ironic sensibility that characterizes his early work.
    1. 1.1Linguistics Place (a word or phrase) at the start of a sentence in order to focus attention on it.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • In a probe recall experiment, a word with a thematized referent was a better recall probe than a word with a non-thematized referent.
      • In the instances here, the adjunct in the first example and the complement in the second example are fronted or thematised.

Derivatives

  • thematization

  • noun θiːmətʌɪˈzɛɪʃ(ə)n
    • But I did not want this revision, this thematization.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • One of the main difficulties in writing on Levinas is the risk of thematizing propositions and concepts which in their very utterance in Levinas's work always already fall victim to thematization.
      • The thematization of language in Irish history and culture is more than a thousand years old.
      • Thus, the novel's obsession with sympathy and its thematization of philanthropy are part of the same project.
      • Various aspects of the writer's complicated position within the widely accepted framework of the fairytale may serve as revelatory thematisations of his artistic and political stance.
      • Such a thematization of Machiavellianism ultimately works to discredit itself, a certain fascinating allure notwithstanding.
      • This can be explained in terms of thematization: selection of a particular noun as subject/theme entails selection of active or passive, and with them apparently past or perfect.
 
 

Definition of thematize in US English:

thematize

(British thematise)
verbˈTHēməˌtīz
[with object]
  • 1Present or select (a subject) as a theme.

    Shelley's imagery is systematic whenever light is being thematized
    Example sentencesExamples
    • In contrast with the long tradition of sepulchral poetry that preceded it, the poem thematizes that eminently modern concept, the nation.
    • Condé's novel thus thematizes a crucial link between the experience of unresolved grief and the articulation of social and political grievances.
    • She thematizes language and the telling of one's own story by using jazz-influenced African American speech as an aesthetic device to unite collective memory and recollections with current realities.
    • His lyrics thematize the painful rift between the private and public persona, the heartbreak that grows from a passionate romance that founders on the incomprehension or outright hostility of an insensitive culture.
    • Combining thematic and biographical approaches, this study will review the strategies gay and lesbian performers used to thematize their own difference.
    • Sicily is depicted as a multiple reality in their novels, which thematise the complexity of Sicily and of being Sicilian.
    • This passage explicitly thematizes the way human temporality is experienced as some form of spatial movement - how space transforms into time.
    • Thus, on some level, Verrocchio's design may also thematize the much-contested sense of touch and, indirectly, the art of sculpture itself.
    • However, the Fogg portrait is remarkable because of the way in which it thematizes the performance of self-representation - the makeup of identity - in a considered and striking manner, as a form of art making.
    • Through political protest, social movements capture the world's attention, thematize injustice, and articulate visions of freedom and equality beyond the bottom line.
    • Throughout the twentieth century language was thematized in Ireland.
    • Moreover, Joutel's text thematizes these problems of communication in complex, literary ways, in scenes that show how misunderstanding and prevarication were inescapable among the Frenchmen, not just between them and the natives.
    • Once thematized sufficiently for his purposes, however, the topic was quickly abandoned by Descartes.
    • But Colombo immediately thematises the narrator's sense of being a stranger in a strange land, which only heightens on his arrival in the U.S.
    • The various stories thematize issues of colorism, marital betrayal, family strife, and poverty.
    • Unlike any of these works, however, the books I want to examine here all explicitly thematize their structure.
    • The fate of system then becomes an event in the novel's narrative and can thus be thematized.
    • But the novel also tells the story of the dissolution of satire; in it Waugh both thematizes and enacts the breakdown of the comic-ironic sensibility that characterizes his early work.
    • Not only does Nebreda explicitly thematise his own diagnosis as schizophrenic, but he also associates the bodily practices depicted throughout with schizophrenia.
    • I am aware of the fact that one can be deeply interested in power without expressly thematizing the topic and using the concept.
    • His text thus thematizes the cultural and political limitations of racialized bio-politics, as well as its role in sustaining and, at the same time, slowly eroding colonial governance.
    • The portrait thematizes and celebrates the very issues for which Boucher was criticized.
    1. 1.1Linguistics Place (a word or phrase) at the start of a sentence in order to focus attention on it.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • In a probe recall experiment, a word with a thematized referent was a better recall probe than a word with a non-thematized referent.
      • In the instances here, the adjunct in the first example and the complement in the second example are fronted or thematised.
 
 
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更新时间:2025/2/4 7:04:22