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词汇 ironize
释义

Definition of ironize in English:

ironize

(British ironise)
verb ˈʌɪr(ə)nʌɪzˈīrəˌnīz
[with object]
  • Use ironically.

    冷嘲,挖苦,讽刺;使具讽刺意味

    this novel follows and yet ironizes many of the conventions of the picaresque narrative

    这部小说虽落了流浪汉题材小说的许多俗套,但也讽刺了这些俗套。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • To what extent do these images ironize and thereby repudiate such representations?
    • Emma's vision is shared only by the narrator and is potentially ironized from that vantage.
    • Ultimately, Lynch's work ironises the view that anything other than multiple, shifting existences can or have occurred.
    • In it, ironised romance is married to a narrative of personal development with feminist inflections.
    • We must start, he seems to be saying, by ironising the masteries of the mind.
    • Here the art seems to idealize and ironize the past simultaneously.
    • But the ideas are stronger than the execution, which often mirrors rather than ironises its subject.
    • With the aid of Bakhtin, we can see a number of distinct discourses which subvert and ironize each other.
    • In the films, he takes on the adventure novel, placing extraordinary people in extraordinary situations, and ironizing those structures in playfully dubious manners.
    • Owenson appears to ironize, even undermine, her main vehicle for explaining Ireland.
    • Utilizing photography and video, my work documents and ironizes the ubiquity of American, media culture.
    • It does not ironize upon the future or destiny: it gets on with turning things into material realities.
    • Levy's mourning involves a considered ironizing of the conditions both of sympathy and rationality.
    • Traces of the epistolary - characters speaking in their own voice without the socially regulative interference of the narrator - are to be found in the ‘detail,’ the reading of which ironizes the norm-enforcing narrator.
    • His journey therefore ironises the assumptions and conventions of his Victorian dinner guests.
    • Tranter ironises the influence of Rimbaud (on both himself and his peers) in ‘Poem ending with a line by Rimbaud’.
    • In the story of Rahab, the stock notion of Canaanite wickedness is ironized and radically relativized, if not demolished altogether.
    • Instead, Mayer provides the shocking example of David Berkowitz to underscore and ironize one of these easy formulations.
    • The context of being watched at the same time as watching neatly ironizes assumptions about volition - that we remain in control of choices over what we watch, and that we occupy ‘real time’ in our relationship with TV.
    • Ivan insight is lost in the fictive world and ironized by the fictive frame.

Definition of ironize in US English:

ironize

(British ironise)
verbˈīrəˌnīz
[with object]
  • Use ironically.

    冷嘲,挖苦,讽刺;使具讽刺意味

    this novel also follows and yet ironizes many of the conventions of the picaresque narrative

    这部小说虽落了流浪汉题材小说的许多俗套,但也讽刺了这些俗套。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • To what extent do these images ironize and thereby repudiate such representations?
    • Instead, Mayer provides the shocking example of David Berkowitz to underscore and ironize one of these easy formulations.
    • Utilizing photography and video, my work documents and ironizes the ubiquity of American, media culture.
    • Owenson appears to ironize, even undermine, her main vehicle for explaining Ireland.
    • Traces of the epistolary - characters speaking in their own voice without the socially regulative interference of the narrator - are to be found in the ‘detail,’ the reading of which ironizes the norm-enforcing narrator.
    • Levy's mourning involves a considered ironizing of the conditions both of sympathy and rationality.
    • Emma's vision is shared only by the narrator and is potentially ironized from that vantage.
    • It does not ironize upon the future or destiny: it gets on with turning things into material realities.
    • But the ideas are stronger than the execution, which often mirrors rather than ironises its subject.
    • Ultimately, Lynch's work ironises the view that anything other than multiple, shifting existences can or have occurred.
    • In the films, he takes on the adventure novel, placing extraordinary people in extraordinary situations, and ironizing those structures in playfully dubious manners.
    • Tranter ironises the influence of Rimbaud (on both himself and his peers) in ‘Poem ending with a line by Rimbaud’.
    • Here the art seems to idealize and ironize the past simultaneously.
    • His journey therefore ironises the assumptions and conventions of his Victorian dinner guests.
    • The context of being watched at the same time as watching neatly ironizes assumptions about volition - that we remain in control of choices over what we watch, and that we occupy ‘real time’ in our relationship with TV.
    • In the story of Rahab, the stock notion of Canaanite wickedness is ironized and radically relativized, if not demolished altogether.
    • Ivan insight is lost in the fictive world and ironized by the fictive frame.
    • In it, ironised romance is married to a narrative of personal development with feminist inflections.
    • With the aid of Bakhtin, we can see a number of distinct discourses which subvert and ironize each other.
    • We must start, he seems to be saying, by ironising the masteries of the mind.
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