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词汇 Polaroid
释义

Definition of Polaroid in English:

Polaroid

noun ˈpəʊlərɔɪdˈpoʊləˌrɔɪd
trademark
  • 1mass noun Material in thin plastic sheets that produces a high degree of plane polarization in light passing through it.

    偏振片

    as modifier Polaroid sunglasses
    1. 1.1Polaroids Sunglasses with lenses made from Polaroid plastic.
      偏振片太阳镜
      I lectured, pulling my Polaroids down to the end of my nose
      Synonyms
      sunglasses, dark glasses
  • 2A photograph taken with a Polaroid camera.

    宝丽来相机拍摄的一次成像照片

    she's come to take more Polaroids
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Gonzalo Ruffat's website has lots of blurry nudes, presented as if they were Polaroids.
    • Working from Polaroids, Kriek has managed to capture the characteristic luminous, blurry grain of commercial Polaroids, and translate this into oversized re-presentations of the images as watercolour paintings.
    • Talbot's negative-positive process was a major factor in the decline of the daguerreotype - which was a one-shot, like a Polaroid.
    • Dash Snow apparently took his Polaroids to capture his life by night.
    • Leandro Erlich and Judi Werthein of Argentina invited visitors to pose for Polaroids against a photomural of a ski chalet, on a set equipped with skis and covered with artificial snow.
    • The edge of a television screen can be seen and the Polaroid from the first photograph is subtly inserted in the rumpled sheets, implying that someone is underneath them.
    • This Japanese tale of first love sounds simple, but then you find out that the film was shot in 16 mm, 8mm, video, Polaroids and digital photos.
    • Xavier Damon's work consists of Polaroids that are being enlarged to fairly large sizes.
    • Some of his Polaroids were originally shot within miles of the hotel and the surrounding beaches, including Miami Beach, South Beach, Hollywood Beach, Fort Lauderdale Beach and Golden Beach.
    • If you want instant gratification shoot Polaroids.
    • ‘Get the pretty ones at the top,’ he says as he poses in the window of The Matchmaker pub for a photograph, the Polaroids spilling out from the pages of names and particulars.
    • Meanwhile, the Drama of the Photo Shoot continues, as I showed the Polaroids to a few of my nearest and dearest.
    • This sensation of dilated time is also present in several 1976 Polaroids showing ordinary things in Welling's studio and the restaurant where he worked during that period.
    • This was of course next to all the snapshots of their team's crashes and a few Polaroids of team members in the hospital, usually giving a thumbs up.
    • After threatening Bourgeau and others with arrest if they didn't cooperate, police officers took close-up Polaroids of some of the images.
    • The images they produce are undeniably crude, but like Polaroids or snapshots from vintage or ‘toy’ cameras, that lack of finesse lends a distinctive, awkward charm.
    • The show's centerpiece was the ‘Hand with Spot’ series: 13 grainy, vastly enlarged Polaroids of the artist's left hand.
    • During a 15-year moratorium on videomaking, beginning in 1979, Campus experimented with large-format Polaroids, then turned to the new medium of digital photography.
    • The top photo was a Polaroid of a smiling woman leaning against a tree, her long brown hair blowing slightly in the breeze.
    • In between the spritzers and sea breezes, they keep track of their dates and potential partners by taking some very strange Polaroids of them - Polaroids that are not of faces but more unusual areas of the body…
adjective ˈpəʊlərɔɪdˈpoʊləˌrɔɪd
Photography
  • 1Relating to or denoting a type of camera with internal processing that produces a finished print rapidly after each exposure.

    〔摄〕宝丽来照相机的,一次成像照相机的

    Example sentencesExamples
    • But now, thanks to a sudden, global enthusiasm for Polaroid cameras, the humiliation of seeing yourself head-down in a punch bowl while gripping your boss in an armlock may well become an almost instantaneous experience.
    • During some downtime several years ago, he hit on the idea of jamming a Polaroid camera to see if it would produce a double exposure, superimposing two separate images overtop one another.
    • It came to me after I'd finished posting about my new Polaroid camera a while back, and was Googling for more info.
    • Sugar-pink boom boxes, CD players, Polaroid cameras, wallets, T-shirts and cushions count as run-of-the-mill merchandise.
    • I have a couple of what I think of as toy cameras, an Action Sampler bought super-cheap and seldom used, a Polaroid camera that prints little stickers.
    1. 1.1 Denoting film for or a photograph taken with a Polaroid camera.
      宝丽来相机拍摄的一次成像照片
      a small Polaroid snapshot

      一张宝丽来小快照。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • The physical appearance of Polaroid prints can vary depending on the camera that was used to create them.
      • Depending on the tools used and the hand technique, the Polaroid film is manipulated to the artist's satisfaction.
      • It will record the daylight present on the summer solstice on Polaroid film with no camera.
      • This manipulated Polaroid print can then be scanned into a computer and further manipulated by the artist.
      • He made a closer study of the Polaroid print, for the boy appeared very dark-skinned, suggesting that perhaps he shared some native bloodlines as well.

Origin

1930s: from polarize + -oid.

Definition of Polaroid in US English:

Polaroid

nounˈpōləˌroidˈpoʊləˌrɔɪd
trademark
  • 1Material in thin plastic sheets that produces a high degree of plane polarization in light passing through it.

    偏振片

    1. 1.1Polaroids Sunglasses with lenses made Polaroid plastic.
      偏振片太阳镜
      Synonyms
      sunglasses, dark glasses
  • 2A photograph taken with a Polaroid camera.

    宝丽来相机拍摄的一次成像照片

    Example sentencesExamples
    • The edge of a television screen can be seen and the Polaroid from the first photograph is subtly inserted in the rumpled sheets, implying that someone is underneath them.
    • The images they produce are undeniably crude, but like Polaroids or snapshots from vintage or ‘toy’ cameras, that lack of finesse lends a distinctive, awkward charm.
    • The show's centerpiece was the ‘Hand with Spot’ series: 13 grainy, vastly enlarged Polaroids of the artist's left hand.
    • During a 15-year moratorium on videomaking, beginning in 1979, Campus experimented with large-format Polaroids, then turned to the new medium of digital photography.
    • Meanwhile, the Drama of the Photo Shoot continues, as I showed the Polaroids to a few of my nearest and dearest.
    • The top photo was a Polaroid of a smiling woman leaning against a tree, her long brown hair blowing slightly in the breeze.
    • After threatening Bourgeau and others with arrest if they didn't cooperate, police officers took close-up Polaroids of some of the images.
    • Some of his Polaroids were originally shot within miles of the hotel and the surrounding beaches, including Miami Beach, South Beach, Hollywood Beach, Fort Lauderdale Beach and Golden Beach.
    • Working from Polaroids, Kriek has managed to capture the characteristic luminous, blurry grain of commercial Polaroids, and translate this into oversized re-presentations of the images as watercolour paintings.
    • Dash Snow apparently took his Polaroids to capture his life by night.
    • This sensation of dilated time is also present in several 1976 Polaroids showing ordinary things in Welling's studio and the restaurant where he worked during that period.
    • This was of course next to all the snapshots of their team's crashes and a few Polaroids of team members in the hospital, usually giving a thumbs up.
    • Leandro Erlich and Judi Werthein of Argentina invited visitors to pose for Polaroids against a photomural of a ski chalet, on a set equipped with skis and covered with artificial snow.
    • Xavier Damon's work consists of Polaroids that are being enlarged to fairly large sizes.
    • Gonzalo Ruffat's website has lots of blurry nudes, presented as if they were Polaroids.
    • This Japanese tale of first love sounds simple, but then you find out that the film was shot in 16 mm, 8mm, video, Polaroids and digital photos.
    • If you want instant gratification shoot Polaroids.
    • Talbot's negative-positive process was a major factor in the decline of the daguerreotype - which was a one-shot, like a Polaroid.
    • ‘Get the pretty ones at the top,’ he says as he poses in the window of The Matchmaker pub for a photograph, the Polaroids spilling out from the pages of names and particulars.
    • In between the spritzers and sea breezes, they keep track of their dates and potential partners by taking some very strange Polaroids of them - Polaroids that are not of faces but more unusual areas of the body…
adjectiveˈpōləˌroidˈpoʊləˌrɔɪd
Photography
  • 1Relating to or denoting a type of camera with internal processing that produces a finished print rapidly after each exposure.

    〔摄〕宝丽来照相机的,一次成像照相机的

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Sugar-pink boom boxes, CD players, Polaroid cameras, wallets, T-shirts and cushions count as run-of-the-mill merchandise.
    • I have a couple of what I think of as toy cameras, an Action Sampler bought super-cheap and seldom used, a Polaroid camera that prints little stickers.
    • But now, thanks to a sudden, global enthusiasm for Polaroid cameras, the humiliation of seeing yourself head-down in a punch bowl while gripping your boss in an armlock may well become an almost instantaneous experience.
    • It came to me after I'd finished posting about my new Polaroid camera a while back, and was Googling for more info.
    • During some downtime several years ago, he hit on the idea of jamming a Polaroid camera to see if it would produce a double exposure, superimposing two separate images overtop one another.
    1. 1.1 Denoting film for or a photograph taken with a Polaroid camera.
      宝丽来相机拍摄的一次成像照片
      a Polaroid snapshot

      一张宝丽来小快照。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • He made a closer study of the Polaroid print, for the boy appeared very dark-skinned, suggesting that perhaps he shared some native bloodlines as well.
      • The physical appearance of Polaroid prints can vary depending on the camera that was used to create them.
      • Depending on the tools used and the hand technique, the Polaroid film is manipulated to the artist's satisfaction.
      • It will record the daylight present on the summer solstice on Polaroid film with no camera.
      • This manipulated Polaroid print can then be scanned into a computer and further manipulated by the artist.

Origin

1930s: from polarize + -oid.

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