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词汇 romanticize
释义

Definition of romanticize in English:

romanticize

(British romanticise)
verb rə(ʊ)ˈmantɪsʌɪzroʊˈmæn(t)əˌsaɪz
[with object]
  • Deal with or describe in an idealized or unrealistic fashion; make (something) seem better or more appealing than it really is.

    使浪漫化;使理想化

    the tendency to romanticize non-industrial societies

    把非工业社会浪漫化的趋势。

    no object she was romanticizing about the past

    她在将过去浪漫化。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • I do not mean to romanticize the life of an at-home parent: many find it isolating and stressful.
    • He has been praised for the strength and command of his early and late nature poetry, for his ability to animate a landscape free of any romanticized sentimentality, and for the scope of his mythic enterprise.
    • I've got news for people who long for the good ol’ days of marriage - you're romanticizing it.
    • I think you are perhaps romanticizing the nature of science.
    • There's certainly a tendency in history to romanticize the heroics of the past.
    • Perhaps there is a need to safeguard traditional occupations and ways of life - not for the sake of romanticising them, but by recognising this way of life as an enterprising, security oriented strategy, and respecting it.
    • This is natural, of course; the tendency to romanticize relationships, the fear of being alone trumping truthful remembrances of paranoia and neuroticism, is one of the cuter things humans do.
    • We always deeply romanticized the idea of space; it was the frontier, it was about the imagination rather than the military and ownership.
    • Such practical problems in communal ownership are often overlooked by environmentalists who romanticise communal ownership.
    • There's a sense in which people sort of read what they want to read in a book, but I do think that in writing the books I was really wrestling with that romanticization, and I think we all have a tendency to romanticize things.
    • But the one thing you could accuse him of is the very same criticism levelled at his hero here; a tendency to romanticise the truth.
    • Nostalgia is a collective, fictionalised and romanticised view of the past, no?
    • There have been films that denied the torment of this terrible illness by romanticizing it as a form of wisdom or special insight.
    • On the whole, the production, and to some extent the play itself, romanticizes the lot of the factory workers in a bewildering way.
    • So much of the writing in the eighties about cocaine and drug abuse managed to romanticize its effects.
    • It is important to continue to question these images, and construct alternatives which will rectify these negative portrayals without idealizing or romanticizing them.
    • However, I still found myself drawn to the book: an aspect of the historical thriller that I have come to love is the way it romanticises the scholar.
    • There's a tendency, especially by Australians, to romanticise a villain.
    • Our culture simultaneously denigrates marriage and romanticizes it.
    • The older popular image of Canadian youth portrayed in historical dramas, for example, tended to romanticize the turn-of-the-century myth that situated white Canadians in a pristine, rural landscape.
    Synonyms
    ennoble, exalt, elevate, lift up, add dignity to, dignify, add lustre to, add distinction to, enhance, increase, augment, promote, boost

Derivatives

  • romanticization

  • noun rə(ʊ)mantɪsʌɪˈzeɪʃ(ə)n
    • But there is another more complex way as well, one that does not depend on an idealization or romanticization of war.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • I ought to apologize to the younger me, who surely wasn't the geeky, eager innocent I just made him out to be, and who would have rolled his eyes at his older self's nostalgic romanticizations.
      • Having lived through it all, as a youth, no less, and therefore naturally given to romanticization and idealization, I can tell you this much: The future ain't all it's cracked up to be.
      • Since widespread romanticization of the Parisian café in the early 20th century, the model seems to have for a while been frozen.
      • This article is a polemic which argues that the historians are mistaken in their condemnation of modern congresses as they are in their romanticization of past ones.
      • This romanticization of lawlessness is hardly innocuous.

Definition of romanticize in US English:

romanticize

(British romanticise)
verbrōˈman(t)əˌsīzroʊˈmæn(t)əˌsaɪz
[with object]
  • Deal with or describe in an idealized or unrealistic fashion; make (something) seem better or more appealing than it really is.

    使浪漫化;使理想化

    the tendency to romanticize nonindustrial societies

    把非工业社会浪漫化的趋势。

    no object she was romanticizing about the past

    她在将过去浪漫化。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • But the one thing you could accuse him of is the very same criticism levelled at his hero here; a tendency to romanticise the truth.
    • It is important to continue to question these images, and construct alternatives which will rectify these negative portrayals without idealizing or romanticizing them.
    • On the whole, the production, and to some extent the play itself, romanticizes the lot of the factory workers in a bewildering way.
    • The older popular image of Canadian youth portrayed in historical dramas, for example, tended to romanticize the turn-of-the-century myth that situated white Canadians in a pristine, rural landscape.
    • I do not mean to romanticize the life of an at-home parent: many find it isolating and stressful.
    • There's certainly a tendency in history to romanticize the heroics of the past.
    • Our culture simultaneously denigrates marriage and romanticizes it.
    • Perhaps there is a need to safeguard traditional occupations and ways of life - not for the sake of romanticising them, but by recognising this way of life as an enterprising, security oriented strategy, and respecting it.
    • He has been praised for the strength and command of his early and late nature poetry, for his ability to animate a landscape free of any romanticized sentimentality, and for the scope of his mythic enterprise.
    • We always deeply romanticized the idea of space; it was the frontier, it was about the imagination rather than the military and ownership.
    • I think you are perhaps romanticizing the nature of science.
    • There's a sense in which people sort of read what they want to read in a book, but I do think that in writing the books I was really wrestling with that romanticization, and I think we all have a tendency to romanticize things.
    • There's a tendency, especially by Australians, to romanticise a villain.
    • So much of the writing in the eighties about cocaine and drug abuse managed to romanticize its effects.
    • There have been films that denied the torment of this terrible illness by romanticizing it as a form of wisdom or special insight.
    • However, I still found myself drawn to the book: an aspect of the historical thriller that I have come to love is the way it romanticises the scholar.
    • Such practical problems in communal ownership are often overlooked by environmentalists who romanticise communal ownership.
    • This is natural, of course; the tendency to romanticize relationships, the fear of being alone trumping truthful remembrances of paranoia and neuroticism, is one of the cuter things humans do.
    • I've got news for people who long for the good ol’ days of marriage - you're romanticizing it.
    • Nostalgia is a collective, fictionalised and romanticised view of the past, no?
    Synonyms
    ennoble, exalt, elevate, lift up, add dignity to, dignify, add lustre to, add distinction to, enhance, increase, augment, promote, boost
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