释义 |
Definition of elision in English: elisionnounɪˈlɪʒ(ə)nəˈlɪʒən mass noun1The omission of a sound or syllable when speaking (as in I'm, let's) 省音,元音溶合(如 I'm,let's,e'en) the shortening of words by elision count noun conversational elisions Example sentencesExamples - Similar to the Raskind and Higgins study, the present research also found significant increases in phonological awareness (i.e., phonological elision and nonword reading).
- Still others prefer a middle option that keeps the apostrophe for omission and elision but drops it for plurality and possession.
- The SRBP also improved the performance of the target group when compared with the contrast group on phonological elision and nonword reading efficiency tasks.
- He puts sequences together classically, with no elisions.
- Aside from occasionally adopting hubby Elvis Costello's cute little habit of syllabic elision, The Girl is character-free.
Synonyms leaving out, exclusion, exception, non-inclusion, deletion, erasure, cut, excision, elimination, absence - 1.1count noun An omission of a passage in a book, speech, or film.
(书、演讲或电影中段落的)删除,删节 the movie's elisions and distortions have been carefully thought out 对这部电影的删节和歪曲是经过仔细考虑的。 Example sentencesExamples - Visual experience thus takes the place of the kind of self-revelation expected in an autobiographical narrative, leaving the reader with mystifying elisions in Lucy's life story.
- This is a rough cut, with some missing audio and some elisions, but it's fascinating to see how thoroughly choreographed this number was when so little of the choreography is visible in the finished film.
- Reading his copious letters - this fat book is only a fifth of the 2,500-odd surviving, and there are elisions in most of those included - is very like hearing him talk.
- This is such an obvious elision that one's instinct is to read the passage again and look for a misprint, or a set of scare quotes - but, no, it is written as intended.
- But Brontë's response implies that if we resist filling in the blanks and instead look closely at these elisions, we may find something more powerful in their place: a picture without words.
- This is hardly the place to rehearse the errors and elisions in his original article, or the way it allows its thesis like a steamroller to flatten the facts.
- The role of the analyst is to hear the voice of the unconscious, which makes itself audible through the censorship of consciousness in riddles, allusions, elisions, and omissions.
- Such forms lead to distortions, exclusions, elisions and the establishment of hegemonies.
- But the eighty-four-minute film's more crucial faults are really its elisions and omissions, among them its failure to flesh out its distinctive characters.
- Constantly, the editing makes tiny elisions within the dialogue.
- We aimed to uncover the elisions that had silenced our experiences, for example, as working class women, and in Jo's case, as someone living with cancer.
- Again, with a little elision, this song speaks almost directly to voters.
- First, to dispense with the comparison of editions: apart from an altered layout and a few minor elisions and emendations, the book is the same as it ever was (as the lyric goes).
- No matter where you look in Performance, you find inconsistency, elisions, inaccuracies, and omissions.
- Every representation is defined by what it compresses or leaves out, and those elisions are made with a specific user in mind.
- Various non-docile members of the community, who Campbell attacks, spend a great amount of time analysing his words and actions for anomalies and wilful elisions.
- I might as well declare my out-and-out fandom at the outset, born of the way each film accumulates authoritatively into its meaning through elisions and congruencies that are virtually baroque in their coiled vitality.
- Unhappily, the argument rides on the back of some startling oversimplifications, exaggerations and elisions.
- The essay is excellent, and there is a temptation to admire this piece's intelligence and insights to the point at which one overlooks its elisions and oversights.
- Pollock, the veteran actor Ed Harris's directorial debut, is a mass-audience movie, not a peer-reviewed treatise, and so it's not fair to pick at historical inaccuracies or elisions.
2The process of joining together or merging things, especially abstract ideas. (尤指抽象观点的)结合;合并,融合 unease at the elision of so many vital questions 对于合并了如此多的重要问题而感到的不安。 Example sentencesExamples - As either a broadcast or digital networked democracy, the individual and his/her body are identified as the central fount of expressive freedom, an elision from the controlling power of institutionalized capitalism and the state.
- However, this involves compaction and an elision; the self processes memory selectively.
- He has made substantial elisions and revisions to the facts for the sake of the story's flow.
- As Liz Frost explores, there is an elision between the consumer power of youth in the Western world, and its ideation as physical perfection.
- Like Mann, Wood develops the theme of the ‘imperialism of trade’, which is to say an elision of two apparently contradictory themes, direct domination, and free exchange.
- There is an elision here in the use of the term ‘resource’.
- Metaphorically, the elisions occur in the image of kissing.
- The elision of two relatively stable and legitimate discourses of the idea of ‘capital’ and ‘emotional intelligence’ is a clever rhetorical move.
- The quotation contains a series of elisions: of time and place, of ancient and modern women, of women's bodies and the earth's body, of nostalgia and healing.
- Across Europe, among the sceptics and the doubters and the out-and-out protesters, a pernicious process of elision is taking place.
- His work thus has the tendency to reproduce the elisions of the religious and political polemics of the sixteenth century while seeking to explain them.
- The obscurity of the pleading which is, if I may so with respect to the drafter of it, exceedingly clever, because the pleading is in terms always of a duty of care to do something and it is there the elision of two very separate ideas.
OriginLate 16th century: from late Latin elisio(n-), from Latin elidere 'crush out' (see elide). Rhymescircumcision, collision, concision, decision, derision, division, envision, excision, imprecision, incision, misprision, precisian, precision, provision, scission, vision Definition of elision in US English: elisionnounəˈlɪʒənəˈliZHən 1The omission of a sound or syllable when speaking (as in I'm, let's, e'en). 省音,元音溶合(如 I'm,let's,e'en) Example sentencesExamples - The SRBP also improved the performance of the target group when compared with the contrast group on phonological elision and nonword reading efficiency tasks.
- Still others prefer a middle option that keeps the apostrophe for omission and elision but drops it for plurality and possession.
- He puts sequences together classically, with no elisions.
- Aside from occasionally adopting hubby Elvis Costello's cute little habit of syllabic elision, The Girl is character-free.
- Similar to the Raskind and Higgins study, the present research also found significant increases in phonological awareness (i.e., phonological elision and nonword reading).
Synonyms leaving out, exclusion, exception, non-inclusion, deletion, erasure, cut, excision, elimination, absence - 1.1 An omission of a passage in a book, speech, or film.
(书、演讲或电影中段落的)删除,删节 the movie's elisions and distortions have been carefully thought out 对这部电影的删节和歪曲是经过仔细考虑的。 Example sentencesExamples - Visual experience thus takes the place of the kind of self-revelation expected in an autobiographical narrative, leaving the reader with mystifying elisions in Lucy's life story.
- But Brontë's response implies that if we resist filling in the blanks and instead look closely at these elisions, we may find something more powerful in their place: a picture without words.
- Constantly, the editing makes tiny elisions within the dialogue.
- Various non-docile members of the community, who Campbell attacks, spend a great amount of time analysing his words and actions for anomalies and wilful elisions.
- This is hardly the place to rehearse the errors and elisions in his original article, or the way it allows its thesis like a steamroller to flatten the facts.
- I might as well declare my out-and-out fandom at the outset, born of the way each film accumulates authoritatively into its meaning through elisions and congruencies that are virtually baroque in their coiled vitality.
- Reading his copious letters - this fat book is only a fifth of the 2,500-odd surviving, and there are elisions in most of those included - is very like hearing him talk.
- Such forms lead to distortions, exclusions, elisions and the establishment of hegemonies.
- But the eighty-four-minute film's more crucial faults are really its elisions and omissions, among them its failure to flesh out its distinctive characters.
- Unhappily, the argument rides on the back of some startling oversimplifications, exaggerations and elisions.
- Every representation is defined by what it compresses or leaves out, and those elisions are made with a specific user in mind.
- Again, with a little elision, this song speaks almost directly to voters.
- This is a rough cut, with some missing audio and some elisions, but it's fascinating to see how thoroughly choreographed this number was when so little of the choreography is visible in the finished film.
- This is such an obvious elision that one's instinct is to read the passage again and look for a misprint, or a set of scare quotes - but, no, it is written as intended.
- No matter where you look in Performance, you find inconsistency, elisions, inaccuracies, and omissions.
- Pollock, the veteran actor Ed Harris's directorial debut, is a mass-audience movie, not a peer-reviewed treatise, and so it's not fair to pick at historical inaccuracies or elisions.
- The role of the analyst is to hear the voice of the unconscious, which makes itself audible through the censorship of consciousness in riddles, allusions, elisions, and omissions.
- The essay is excellent, and there is a temptation to admire this piece's intelligence and insights to the point at which one overlooks its elisions and oversights.
- We aimed to uncover the elisions that had silenced our experiences, for example, as working class women, and in Jo's case, as someone living with cancer.
- First, to dispense with the comparison of editions: apart from an altered layout and a few minor elisions and emendations, the book is the same as it ever was (as the lyric goes).
- 1.2 The process of joining together or merging things, especially abstract ideas.
(尤指抽象观点的)结合;合并,融合 unease at the elision of so many vital questions 对于合并了如此多的重要问题而感到的不安。 Example sentencesExamples - However, this involves compaction and an elision; the self processes memory selectively.
- The elision of two relatively stable and legitimate discourses of the idea of ‘capital’ and ‘emotional intelligence’ is a clever rhetorical move.
- As either a broadcast or digital networked democracy, the individual and his/her body are identified as the central fount of expressive freedom, an elision from the controlling power of institutionalized capitalism and the state.
- As Liz Frost explores, there is an elision between the consumer power of youth in the Western world, and its ideation as physical perfection.
- Across Europe, among the sceptics and the doubters and the out-and-out protesters, a pernicious process of elision is taking place.
- Like Mann, Wood develops the theme of the ‘imperialism of trade’, which is to say an elision of two apparently contradictory themes, direct domination, and free exchange.
- There is an elision here in the use of the term ‘resource’.
- His work thus has the tendency to reproduce the elisions of the religious and political polemics of the sixteenth century while seeking to explain them.
- The obscurity of the pleading which is, if I may so with respect to the drafter of it, exceedingly clever, because the pleading is in terms always of a duty of care to do something and it is there the elision of two very separate ideas.
- The quotation contains a series of elisions: of time and place, of ancient and modern women, of women's bodies and the earth's body, of nostalgia and healing.
- Metaphorically, the elisions occur in the image of kissing.
- He has made substantial elisions and revisions to the facts for the sake of the story's flow.
OriginLate 16th century: from late Latin elisio(n-), from Latin elidere ‘crush out’ (see elide). |