| 释义 |
illustrate /ˈɪləstreɪt /verb1 [with object] Provide (a book, newspaper, etc.) with pictures: the guide is illustrated with full-colour photographs...- To illustrate the Book of Ruth, Merian chose to represent Boaz and Ruth at the threshing floor.
- Photographic picture books, illustrating New York and other subjects, proliferated; a number of these featured the work of the new documentary photographers.
- John Hodgkiss edited the diverse selection of reportage and portrait photographs illustrating the book.
Synonyms decorate, adorn, ornament, embellish, accompany; add pictures/drawings/sketches to, provide artwork for with illustrations, with pictures, with drawings, with sketches, pictorial; decorated, adorned, ornamented, embellished 1.1Explain or make (something) clear by using examples, charts, pictures, etc. the results are illustrated in Figure 7...- When Touch of Evil was first announced, a documentary explaining and illustrating the changes that resulted from Welles' memo was to have been included with the DVD.
- One or two things seem to me underplayed (the great baroque invention of the Duet, for example), but thought has gone into explaining and illustrating most genres.
- So let's look at another example as we explain and illustrate the general method.
Synonyms explain, elucidate, clarify, make clear, make plain, demonstrate, point up, show, bring home, emphasize, interpret; describe, sum up, summarize, gloss informal get across, get over 2Serve as an example of: the World Cup illustrated what high standards our players must achieve...- One example will serve to illustrate how comprehensive and penetrating his discernment is.
- Three examples can serve to illustrate how a choice of ruler was made and the thinking behind the resources made available to him.
- Clearly, this is a grossly simplified example but it serves to illustrate how such a solution is very open to sabotage.
Synonyms exemplify, show, demonstrate, display, instance, encapsulate, represent rare instantiate Origin Early 16th century (in the sense 'illuminate, shed light on'): from Latin illustrat- 'lit up', from the verb illustrare, from in- 'upon' + lustrare 'illuminate'. |