网站首页  词典首页

请输入您要查询的词汇:

 

词汇 contextualize
释义

Definition of contextualize in English:

contextualize

(British contextualise)
verb kənˈtɛkstʃʊəlʌɪzkənˈtɛks(t)ʃ(u)əˌlaɪz
[with object]
  • Place or study in context.

    置于语境中,置于上下文(或背景)中;在上下文(或背景)中研究

    the excellent introduction summarizes and contextualizes Bowen's career
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Newman ushered the study of church history into modernity in England by contextualizing it with the concerns of modernity, yet he did so with heresy as the backdrop.
    • And artists (as well as their curators) find ways of contextualizing their work in the models of science and history of religion.
    • Qualitative inquiry, on the other hand, through use of methods such as unstructured or semistructured interviews, provides a way to study subjectivity as socially and culturally contextualized experience.
    • Students are also asked to describe the impact the book had on them in terms of perceptions regarding spirituality and how it was contextualized by the book's author.
    • It is particularly important, when considering the issue of media literacy, to appreciate that the question of technology needs to be contextualized in terms of wider cultural and political contexts.
    • Nonetheless, the basis is established for a sustained and contextualised study of agency, activists, organisation, process, strategy and tactics.
    • Moreover, they fail to contextualize Artemisia's experience and uncritically assume that the rape and trial were the most consequential events of the artist's long life.
    • This book contextualizes women who have been out there since before queer theory but without confining them in any way.
    • The highly situated and situational nature of service learning requires that teacher-scholars in this field contextualize our studies and findings.
    • It always amazes me when I find a picture that contextualizes my thoughts, when I find truth in that cliché about a picture and a thousand words.
    • She rightfully takes exception to New Zealand texts, which purport to democratise the understanding of war but fail to contextualise women's experiences.
    • Michael also reviewed many books for the journal, combining speed of turnaround, with incisiveness and a broad understanding of transport history with which to contextualise the book reviewed.
    • His last speech and his death are theatrical moments beyond all reason and expectation; his words define and contextualise his action as martyrdom, not suicide.
    • Even as the authors provide captions conveying artists' descriptions of the works, they fail to adequately contextualize these captions.
    • Can there not be studies that explore, complicate, flesh out, or contextualize this central narrative with new insights and evidence?
    • Reynolds, first of all, does a superb job of contextualizing the episode, of making it clear that during the struggle over statehood violence was everywhere employed.
    • More importantly, Lamont is exceptionally skillful at contextualizing the incident, and integrating the larger issues with the day-to-day events as they unfolded.
    • The book contextualizes the slave trade and makes clear that the U.S. was not the only place where Africans were enslaved in the New World.
    • And finally, I may also forget to include key information that would help to contextualize a given situation.
    • This will provide an overall context for each national case study and will help contextualize the use of Internet technology by environmental groups.

Derivatives

  • contextualization

  • nounkəntɛkstjʊəlʌɪˈzeɪʃ(ə)n
    • We are passing through a crisis of identity and, consequently, a crisis of contextualization.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • In its varied contextualisation, the book is truly exciting in its democracy, showing how inventors, operators, ‘radio hams’ and the public all played a part in the spread of wireless.
      • To have a sign remains insufficient, however, for it is biblical contextualization and argumentation that gives a sign meaning.
      • Currently there is less funding but great interest in furthering the study of sexology from a perspective that pays primary attention to the social, cultural, and historical contextualization of sexual behaviors and responses.
      • It is this relatively low degree of contextualization that renders these data good for some inferences, but not as good for others.
      • Damage control, contextualization, historical positioning: This is myth-making - or branding, as we so prosaically call it these days - at its finest.
      • In broad strokes, the book is about contextualization, Asian characteristics of Christian theologies, interreligious dialogue and Christian theology, and Asian forms of liberation theology.
      • Without biographical contextualization, it would be difficult to know how to answer these questions.
      • A larger historical contextualization of these seemingly isolated events would have filled in such a gap.
      • While I'm not sure it was ever the curator's intention, the exhibit threw light on the museum collection process and struggle for contextualisation.
      • However, rather than presenting images and the stories behind them, there is once again a repetitious use of the same emblematic images with little contextualization.
      • I have argued that alternative worship is one strategy for contextualisation and resistance in postmodernity.
      • Such contextualisation is necessary in order to provide a comprehensive account of Mawson's life and achievements.
      • This formulation ensures that any contextualisation will remain absent.
      • Unable to look beyond the human perspective, we cannot merely contextualize consciousness without admitting that this act of contextualization, or naturalization, is also a product of mind and therefore circumscribed by it.
      • Discussions of ‘socialist modernization’ and the campaign for ‘cultured trade’ of the 1930s also need broader contextualization.
      • But there is a good deal of traditional historical contextualization here as well, so the book should prove valuable to scholars of diverse temperaments and intellectual loyalties.
      • Although there is much to disagree with in this book, I love it because it is a wonderful case study in the contextualisation of the gospel.
      • It gets frustrating when your album falls victim to extreme contextualisation.
      • They each add multiple levels of sensory intensity in the cultural and geographic contextualization of the sculpture and will leave viewers with the feeling of having been there.

Definition of contextualize in US English:

contextualize

(British contextualise)
verbkənˈteks(t)SH(o͞o)əˌlīzkənˈtɛks(t)ʃ(u)əˌlaɪz
[with object]
  • Place or study in context.

    置于语境中,置于上下文(或背景)中;在上下文(或背景)中研究

    the book contextualizes Melville's short fiction and poetry
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Qualitative inquiry, on the other hand, through use of methods such as unstructured or semistructured interviews, provides a way to study subjectivity as socially and culturally contextualized experience.
    • Students are also asked to describe the impact the book had on them in terms of perceptions regarding spirituality and how it was contextualized by the book's author.
    • Michael also reviewed many books for the journal, combining speed of turnaround, with incisiveness and a broad understanding of transport history with which to contextualise the book reviewed.
    • The book contextualizes the slave trade and makes clear that the U.S. was not the only place where Africans were enslaved in the New World.
    • It always amazes me when I find a picture that contextualizes my thoughts, when I find truth in that cliché about a picture and a thousand words.
    • Nonetheless, the basis is established for a sustained and contextualised study of agency, activists, organisation, process, strategy and tactics.
    • And artists (as well as their curators) find ways of contextualizing their work in the models of science and history of religion.
    • Moreover, they fail to contextualize Artemisia's experience and uncritically assume that the rape and trial were the most consequential events of the artist's long life.
    • She rightfully takes exception to New Zealand texts, which purport to democratise the understanding of war but fail to contextualise women's experiences.
    • Newman ushered the study of church history into modernity in England by contextualizing it with the concerns of modernity, yet he did so with heresy as the backdrop.
    • More importantly, Lamont is exceptionally skillful at contextualizing the incident, and integrating the larger issues with the day-to-day events as they unfolded.
    • Can there not be studies that explore, complicate, flesh out, or contextualize this central narrative with new insights and evidence?
    • It is particularly important, when considering the issue of media literacy, to appreciate that the question of technology needs to be contextualized in terms of wider cultural and political contexts.
    • Reynolds, first of all, does a superb job of contextualizing the episode, of making it clear that during the struggle over statehood violence was everywhere employed.
    • This book contextualizes women who have been out there since before queer theory but without confining them in any way.
    • His last speech and his death are theatrical moments beyond all reason and expectation; his words define and contextualise his action as martyrdom, not suicide.
    • This will provide an overall context for each national case study and will help contextualize the use of Internet technology by environmental groups.
    • Even as the authors provide captions conveying artists' descriptions of the works, they fail to adequately contextualize these captions.
    • And finally, I may also forget to include key information that would help to contextualize a given situation.
    • The highly situated and situational nature of service learning requires that teacher-scholars in this field contextualize our studies and findings.
随便看

 

春雷网英语在线翻译词典收录了464360条英语词汇在线翻译词条,基本涵盖了全部常用英语词汇的中英文双语翻译及用法,是英语学习的有利工具。

 

Copyright © 2000-2024 Sndmkt.com All Rights Reserved 更新时间:2025/1/14 16:07:51