释义 |
Definition of concretize in English: concretize(British concretise) verb ˈkɒŋkrɪtʌɪzkänˈkrētˌīz [with object]Make (an idea or concept) real; give specific or definite form to. 使(思想观念,概念)具体化 the theme park is an attempt to concretize our fantasies about America 主题公园是将我们对美国的想像具体化的尝试。 Example sentencesExamples - For him it was a means of revealing the divine principle and concretizing a personal vision of the Supreme Being that had been vouchsafed to him.
- The writer is aware of this, it seems, and the book is a catalogue of his attempts to concretise emotion.
- One might be excused for appreciating Baechler's black and white cameos less as independent sculptures than as concretized images detached from his paintings.
- Recent events have exacerbated intra-Kurdish antagonisms, but also concretized the autonomy that already exists.
- As one reads into the New Testament lessons, the idea of the new song can be concretized first through an understanding of the Greek translation of ‘new song.’
- How can people in such a context concretise their own empowerment?
- He concretized the notion of the triple heritage of modern Africa: traditional, Islamic, and European.
- That's exactly why Mr Ramlogan ended his treatise with the implicit suggestion of structural transformation to concretise the concept of ‘power to the people’.
- It's like concretizing a moment in the present.
- The establishment of a nation state fueled messianic visions, and may have concretized some ideas that should have been kept more fluid.
- The highlight of her career was her 1893 appearance at the Chicago World's Fair where her pancake-flipping antics and tales of slavery concretized a negative stereotype of African American women.
- So we would like to wait and see whether the assurances that he's now held out in recent days are actually concretized in terms of action on the ground.
- But I always ask people three questions about accountability to try and concretise the discussion.
- The decreasing visibility occurred in part because of the attempt to concretize images of political modernization in the city.
- You could forgive Wolff for overlooking Powers' piece if he'd concretized the idea of liberal humorlessness with specific readings from the humorless left.
- Summing up the results of analysis and encyclopedia definitions and concretizing them on the basis of appropriate subjects of military engineering, we can decide on the following interpretation.
- Despite the economic and social laws of Moribundian society, a clear class structure does exist, and it is a society in which characters concretise their class stereotypes at all levels and at all times.
- The stone embankment came up in Hari Singh's regime and was further concretized by the successive governments.
- Beside the production work, does it take you a lot of time to concretise your ideas?
- Students can be invited to examine the relationship between ‘public’ and ‘private’ dynamics of power and violence, exploring and concretizing the concept of ‘intersections.’
Synonyms personify, incorporate, give human form to, give human shape to, realize, manifest, express, symbolize, represent, epitomize, stand for, encapsulate, typify, exemplify
Derivativesnoun kɒŋkrɪtʌɪˈzeɪʃ(ə)n Barely a blade of grass has escaped the maniacal concretisation of the place. Example sentencesExamples - At a deeper level, the importance given to concretization and measurability is usually regarded as a fundamental aspect of the U.S. view of progress more than an Arab conception of human achievement.
- In his mind, music was an abstract form following mathematical rules, whereas surrealism was the concretization of the breaking of rules.
- There is one critical difference, however, which renders this analogy between the situation of French and Russian writers more or less formal and wanting in historical concretization.
- He is beyond perception, beyond concretization.
Definition of concretize in US English: concretize(British concretise) verbkänˈkrētˌīz [with object]Make (an idea or concept) real; give specific or definite form to. 使(思想观念,概念)具体化 the theme park is an attempt to concretize our fantasies 主题公园是将我们对美国的想像具体化的尝试。 Example sentencesExamples - So we would like to wait and see whether the assurances that he's now held out in recent days are actually concretized in terms of action on the ground.
- How can people in such a context concretise their own empowerment?
- You could forgive Wolff for overlooking Powers' piece if he'd concretized the idea of liberal humorlessness with specific readings from the humorless left.
- For him it was a means of revealing the divine principle and concretizing a personal vision of the Supreme Being that had been vouchsafed to him.
- Recent events have exacerbated intra-Kurdish antagonisms, but also concretized the autonomy that already exists.
- One might be excused for appreciating Baechler's black and white cameos less as independent sculptures than as concretized images detached from his paintings.
- As one reads into the New Testament lessons, the idea of the new song can be concretized first through an understanding of the Greek translation of ‘new song.’
- The stone embankment came up in Hari Singh's regime and was further concretized by the successive governments.
- Despite the economic and social laws of Moribundian society, a clear class structure does exist, and it is a society in which characters concretise their class stereotypes at all levels and at all times.
- It's like concretizing a moment in the present.
- The decreasing visibility occurred in part because of the attempt to concretize images of political modernization in the city.
- The writer is aware of this, it seems, and the book is a catalogue of his attempts to concretise emotion.
- The establishment of a nation state fueled messianic visions, and may have concretized some ideas that should have been kept more fluid.
- That's exactly why Mr Ramlogan ended his treatise with the implicit suggestion of structural transformation to concretise the concept of ‘power to the people’.
- Summing up the results of analysis and encyclopedia definitions and concretizing them on the basis of appropriate subjects of military engineering, we can decide on the following interpretation.
- But I always ask people three questions about accountability to try and concretise the discussion.
- Beside the production work, does it take you a lot of time to concretise your ideas?
- He concretized the notion of the triple heritage of modern Africa: traditional, Islamic, and European.
- The highlight of her career was her 1893 appearance at the Chicago World's Fair where her pancake-flipping antics and tales of slavery concretized a negative stereotype of African American women.
- Students can be invited to examine the relationship between ‘public’ and ‘private’ dynamics of power and violence, exploring and concretizing the concept of ‘intersections.’
Synonyms personify, incorporate, give human form to, give human shape to, realize, manifest, express, symbolize, represent, epitomize, stand for, encapsulate, typify, exemplify |