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词汇 reductive
释义

Definition of reductive in English:

reductive

adjective rɪˈdʌktɪvrəˈdəktɪv
  • 1Tending to present a subject or problem in a simplified form, especially one viewed as crude.

    有简单化倾向的

    such a conclusion by itself would be reductive

    孤立地看,此结论有使问题简单化的倾向。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • It's a reductive attitude that sells Scotland short and it's one I detest.
    • Furthermore, the underlying suggestion of an inherent connection between physicality and culture seems awkwardly reductive.
    • I thought we were getting overly reductive and simplistic.
    • Any professors worthy of the title have strong views, of course, but they should also have a keen sense that those views may be wrong, or based on incomplete evidence, or highly reductive.
    • I think people want the discourse to be elevated a little bit, to be a little more challenging with your subject matter, and with your characters, and not reductive about them.
    • What is bad about all terror is when it is attached to religious and political abstractions and reductive myths that keep veering away from history and sense.
    • Crass, cheap, reductive and - if viewed in a certain light - even rather homophobic?
    • Their speech is poor, short, simplistic, and reductive of the complexity of the situation.
    • Not only is this view reductive, it reinscribes the ethnocentrism of the Britain's imperialist past under the guise of making a ‘safer’ present through the same war-mongering means.
    • Science, he argues, is necessarily reductive, and reductive science undermines humanist ideas about phenomena such as consciousness or free will.
    • The need to escape the reductive view of sex work as only a career is another important theme in the book, which is developed in the chapters on France, Brazil, Lima, Sri Lanka, and the Philippines.
    • It is the kind of film that, without being overly simplistic or reductive, you could show to a sixth grade class of students and they would clearly understand ‘what's going down.’
    • However, most of the major statements on critical pedagogy reinscribe a more reductive view of power in the classroom.
    • He had retreated into a reductive cynicism, whose one belief, and satirical tactic, argued that behind every purportedly noble trend lurked greed, lust or madness.
    • This might be too reductive, but there always seems to be a man, a woman and a child as the central axis.
    • The imagination, ethics, and, ultimately, logic itself demand a less reductive view.
    • But such a view is surely reductive: Young has not only been actively releasing albums throughout the 90s and into the 00s, but several of them been unexpectedly solid as well.
    • The comparisons Malick makes are simplistic and reductive.
    • We commonly understand stereotyping as a negative and reductive way of reinforcing power relations, eg: ‘Men are better at maths and science than women.’
    • ‘It's the most reductive story in the song,’ says Marcus.
    1. 1.1 (with reference to art) minimal.
      (艺术)极简抽象艺术的
      he combines his reductive abstract shapes with a rippled surface

      他将极简艺术的抽象形状与波纹表面结合在一起。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • Powers's reductive designs playfully reference early works in abstract painting while breaking new territory with their highly creative use of materials.
      • Later, in Los Angeles, he gave up painting - reductive abstractions whose compositions suggest some formal relationship to his later work in photography.
      • His reductive abstract style, while increasingly planar and hard-edged, remained connected to aspects of the observed world.
      • The reductive austerities of Minimalism were followed by a wide range of art movements that brought the body forcefully back into art - although not by the standard mimetic means.
      • Throughout the 1960s and '70s, Lundeberg kept pace with her husband, who had developed his own manner of reductive abstraction based on forms of the human body.
      • How is it that Max Cole's large acrylic paintings manage to look so fresh in the context of four full decades of reductive abstraction?
      • What then is the difference between Minimalism and other expressions of the reductive sensibility?
      • Intending a duet of complementary forms, both artists used organic materials to create compositions that are spare and reductive, without overlapping or extraneous elements.
      • Perhaps it was the sheer variety of painting styles employed in these abstract paintings that made them seem somewhat imitative and reductive.
      • Emphatically framed by the terrace walls, the Inland Sea looks painted, while Sugimoto's black-and-white photos are so reductive that they evoke abstract paintings.
      • Her paintings are executed in vibrant palettes and flat, broad shapes, their reductive surfaces reminiscent of advertising billboards, as well as the cool, illustrative portraits of Alex Katz.
      • His figures are made from reductive shapes - circles, squares, cones - that create a kind of shorthand of the body in much the same way that a cartoonist might employ characterisation techniques.
      • Deeton's new works might be described as reductive minimalism for those who don't like reductive minimalism.
      • Nor is it merely the fact that they are swimming against the tide of Modernism with its utopian sense of inevitability and its flagship aesthetic of reductive minimalism.
      • There is a reductive, Minimalist character to this work as well.
      • Painting came off best, taking two primary directions: reductive abstraction and figurative work characterized by a dispassionate folksiness.
      • Six subsequent landscapes become successively more reductive, as both the fiver and the horizon are eliminated from view.
      • Jones is a master of the reductive impulse, a maker of rigorously crafted geometric abstractions that function as emblems of energy, generators of metaphor.
      • The richly textured geometric shapes and reductive ground recall certain works by Nicholson, while the fractured landscape elements hint at Nash.
      • Heard carelessly, this sound/music may not impress, its apparent minimalism striking the listener as overly reductive.
  • 2Relating to chemical reduction.

    (与)还原反应(有关)的

    the reductive elimination of acetyl iodide
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Malic enzyme catalyses the reductive decarboxylation of malate to pyruvate.
    • Their contention, supported by the evidence of Professor Baldwin, is that both oxidative and reductive pathways involve the enol.
    • This pair may accept a proton either in the oxidative or reductive phase, which in turn causes release of a proton to the water pool.
    • NO, with its unpaired electron, is a free radical capable of undergoing various oxidative and reductive reactions, whereas CO is relatively inert.
    • Coke, which is pyrolyzed from coal in the coke oven, is a reductive reactant used in steel plants.

Derivatives

  • reductively

  • adverb rɪˈdʌktɪvlirəˈdəktɪvli
    • To put it differently and a little reductively, we have two sets of desires, and they issue in at least the two responses.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • So, if living systems cannot be reductively defined in some other way, it will follow that no reductive account of life will be forthcoming.
      • Do we perceive symbols reductively, through the filter of our own experience, and if so how do we know we are seeing what the artist intended?
      • Work by women, for example, if it's noticed at all, is usually noticed reductively.
      • The dangers of writing either melodramatically or reductively about the slaughter and terror at the center of these new killing fields are all too real.
  • reductiveness

  • noun
    • Let me state this point in a different way: the reductiveness of the usual kind of ‘historical background’ has its appeal, and also its utility.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • To be fair, Simpson ends by offering suggestions to avoid reductiveness of this sort.
      • Aghion, moreover, covers all the relevant topics in sufficient depth to escape any suspicion of reductiveness, at least as far as I am concerned.
      • We're left with a social parable of mind-boggling reductiveness.
      • Using next to nothing, he activates the whole sheet; the reductiveness makes you acutely aware of every mark and blemish.

Definition of reductive in US English:

reductive

adjectiverəˈdəktivrəˈdəktɪv
  • 1Tending to present a subject or problem in a simplified form, especially one viewed as crude.

    有简单化倾向的

    such a conclusion by itself would be reductive

    孤立地看,此结论有使问题简单化的倾向。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Their speech is poor, short, simplistic, and reductive of the complexity of the situation.
    • The comparisons Malick makes are simplistic and reductive.
    • The imagination, ethics, and, ultimately, logic itself demand a less reductive view.
    • Furthermore, the underlying suggestion of an inherent connection between physicality and culture seems awkwardly reductive.
    • Crass, cheap, reductive and - if viewed in a certain light - even rather homophobic?
    • He had retreated into a reductive cynicism, whose one belief, and satirical tactic, argued that behind every purportedly noble trend lurked greed, lust or madness.
    • But such a view is surely reductive: Young has not only been actively releasing albums throughout the 90s and into the 00s, but several of them been unexpectedly solid as well.
    • We commonly understand stereotyping as a negative and reductive way of reinforcing power relations, eg: ‘Men are better at maths and science than women.’
    • Science, he argues, is necessarily reductive, and reductive science undermines humanist ideas about phenomena such as consciousness or free will.
    • The need to escape the reductive view of sex work as only a career is another important theme in the book, which is developed in the chapters on France, Brazil, Lima, Sri Lanka, and the Philippines.
    • It's a reductive attitude that sells Scotland short and it's one I detest.
    • This might be too reductive, but there always seems to be a man, a woman and a child as the central axis.
    • ‘It's the most reductive story in the song,’ says Marcus.
    • Any professors worthy of the title have strong views, of course, but they should also have a keen sense that those views may be wrong, or based on incomplete evidence, or highly reductive.
    • What is bad about all terror is when it is attached to religious and political abstractions and reductive myths that keep veering away from history and sense.
    • I thought we were getting overly reductive and simplistic.
    • However, most of the major statements on critical pedagogy reinscribe a more reductive view of power in the classroom.
    • I think people want the discourse to be elevated a little bit, to be a little more challenging with your subject matter, and with your characters, and not reductive about them.
    • It is the kind of film that, without being overly simplistic or reductive, you could show to a sixth grade class of students and they would clearly understand ‘what's going down.’
    • Not only is this view reductive, it reinscribes the ethnocentrism of the Britain's imperialist past under the guise of making a ‘safer’ present through the same war-mongering means.
    1. 1.1 (with reference to art) minimal.
      (艺术)极简抽象艺术的
      he combines his reductive abstract shapes with a rippled surface

      他将极简艺术的抽象形状与波纹表面结合在一起。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • Intending a duet of complementary forms, both artists used organic materials to create compositions that are spare and reductive, without overlapping or extraneous elements.
      • Deeton's new works might be described as reductive minimalism for those who don't like reductive minimalism.
      • Heard carelessly, this sound/music may not impress, its apparent minimalism striking the listener as overly reductive.
      • There is a reductive, Minimalist character to this work as well.
      • The reductive austerities of Minimalism were followed by a wide range of art movements that brought the body forcefully back into art - although not by the standard mimetic means.
      • Her paintings are executed in vibrant palettes and flat, broad shapes, their reductive surfaces reminiscent of advertising billboards, as well as the cool, illustrative portraits of Alex Katz.
      • His reductive abstract style, while increasingly planar and hard-edged, remained connected to aspects of the observed world.
      • Later, in Los Angeles, he gave up painting - reductive abstractions whose compositions suggest some formal relationship to his later work in photography.
      • Jones is a master of the reductive impulse, a maker of rigorously crafted geometric abstractions that function as emblems of energy, generators of metaphor.
      • Six subsequent landscapes become successively more reductive, as both the fiver and the horizon are eliminated from view.
      • Emphatically framed by the terrace walls, the Inland Sea looks painted, while Sugimoto's black-and-white photos are so reductive that they evoke abstract paintings.
      • What then is the difference between Minimalism and other expressions of the reductive sensibility?
      • The richly textured geometric shapes and reductive ground recall certain works by Nicholson, while the fractured landscape elements hint at Nash.
      • Powers's reductive designs playfully reference early works in abstract painting while breaking new territory with their highly creative use of materials.
      • Nor is it merely the fact that they are swimming against the tide of Modernism with its utopian sense of inevitability and its flagship aesthetic of reductive minimalism.
      • Throughout the 1960s and '70s, Lundeberg kept pace with her husband, who had developed his own manner of reductive abstraction based on forms of the human body.
      • Perhaps it was the sheer variety of painting styles employed in these abstract paintings that made them seem somewhat imitative and reductive.
      • Painting came off best, taking two primary directions: reductive abstraction and figurative work characterized by a dispassionate folksiness.
      • His figures are made from reductive shapes - circles, squares, cones - that create a kind of shorthand of the body in much the same way that a cartoonist might employ characterisation techniques.
      • How is it that Max Cole's large acrylic paintings manage to look so fresh in the context of four full decades of reductive abstraction?
  • 2Relating to chemical reduction.

    (与)还原反应(有关)的

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Coke, which is pyrolyzed from coal in the coke oven, is a reductive reactant used in steel plants.
    • NO, with its unpaired electron, is a free radical capable of undergoing various oxidative and reductive reactions, whereas CO is relatively inert.
    • Malic enzyme catalyses the reductive decarboxylation of malate to pyruvate.
    • Their contention, supported by the evidence of Professor Baldwin, is that both oxidative and reductive pathways involve the enol.
    • This pair may accept a proton either in the oxidative or reductive phase, which in turn causes release of a proton to the water pool.
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