释义 |
Definition of close-up in English: close-upnoun ˈkləʊsʌpˈkloʊsˌəp 1A photograph or film image taken at close range and showing the subject on a large scale. (照片、电影、录像的)特写 她的脸部特写。 they see themselves in close-up 他们在特写镜头里观看自己。 Example sentencesExamples - Views shift from close-ups to vistas and from one angle of vision to another, as if captured by a peripatetic camera.
- The film begins with a close-up of an eye, one of several repeated motifs.
- Images - including stark close-ups of people - are in crisp black and white.
- That's why, after a certain number of films, I couldn't stand looking at myself in close-up.
- The beginning of the film shows a selection of different modes of transport, all in close-up and fragmented.
- The film is a slow zoom from an extreme wide shot of a room into an extreme close-up of a single image.
- We did so, and moved towards the nearest exit that would still allow us a close-up view of the fireworks.
- We see images of a panther and a tiger in close-up pacing their cages.
- The expressions on the faces of the players in close-up provoke emotion in the audience.
- Cinematically put, you have to shoot at once in close-up and with a wide-angle lens.
- Apparently the highlight of the film is a long close-up of a turtle eating grapes.
- If you take close-ups only occasionally, a simple set of screw-on close-up filters will provide an inexpensive solution.
- As I positioned myself for some close-ups, my film ran out and I whipped out another reel to reload.
- The camera stays in close-up as it follows her walking down the street.
- If I missed a detail I would go back and film a close-up or something to help link the images.
- He decided, on the spur of the moment, to photograph their bodies in close-up.
- The predominant use of close-ups and extreme close-ups throughout the film also expresses this excess.
- He toured the eerily dark and vacant structure to get a close-up view of the damage.
- Wide shots of the men on the mountain are used, while actors play the pair in close-up scenes filmed in the European Alps.
- Lying among the barberfish, I was able to get good close-up photographs even with my super-wide-angle lens.
- Her photographs are mainly close-ups of trees, but also include patterns found on weathered concrete or left behind by removed posters.
- 1.1 An intimate and detailed description or study.
详细描述;详尽研究 as modifier the book's close-up account of the violence 书内对暴行的详尽记述。 Example sentencesExamples - The close-up reporting that follows is detailed and selective in its focus.
- Here's a close-up view of your habits - what drives you to eat, overeat or even undereat.
- This book consists of close-up reporting, deploying a novelist's eye for detail and ear for dialogue.
- Hers is an intimate, common and close-up portrayal, full of everyday happenings and concerns.
Definition of close-up in US English: close-upnounˈklōsˌəpˈkloʊsˌəp 1A photograph, movie, or video taken at close range and showing the subject on a large scale. (照片、电影、录像的)特写 她的脸部特写。 they see themselves in close-up 他们在特写镜头里观看自己。 as modifier a close-up view Example sentencesExamples - The beginning of the film shows a selection of different modes of transport, all in close-up and fragmented.
- If you take close-ups only occasionally, a simple set of screw-on close-up filters will provide an inexpensive solution.
- He decided, on the spur of the moment, to photograph their bodies in close-up.
- Apparently the highlight of the film is a long close-up of a turtle eating grapes.
- That's why, after a certain number of films, I couldn't stand looking at myself in close-up.
- Her photographs are mainly close-ups of trees, but also include patterns found on weathered concrete or left behind by removed posters.
- Images - including stark close-ups of people - are in crisp black and white.
- Wide shots of the men on the mountain are used, while actors play the pair in close-up scenes filmed in the European Alps.
- The film is a slow zoom from an extreme wide shot of a room into an extreme close-up of a single image.
- He toured the eerily dark and vacant structure to get a close-up view of the damage.
- Lying among the barberfish, I was able to get good close-up photographs even with my super-wide-angle lens.
- Cinematically put, you have to shoot at once in close-up and with a wide-angle lens.
- If I missed a detail I would go back and film a close-up or something to help link the images.
- The film begins with a close-up of an eye, one of several repeated motifs.
- The expressions on the faces of the players in close-up provoke emotion in the audience.
- We see images of a panther and a tiger in close-up pacing their cages.
- The predominant use of close-ups and extreme close-ups throughout the film also expresses this excess.
- As I positioned myself for some close-ups, my film ran out and I whipped out another reel to reload.
- We did so, and moved towards the nearest exit that would still allow us a close-up view of the fireworks.
- Views shift from close-ups to vistas and from one angle of vision to another, as if captured by a peripatetic camera.
- The camera stays in close-up as it follows her walking down the street.
- 1.1 An intimate and detailed description or study.
详细描述;详尽研究 as modifier the book's close-up account of the violence 书内对暴行的详尽记述。 Example sentencesExamples - Here's a close-up view of your habits - what drives you to eat, overeat or even undereat.
- This book consists of close-up reporting, deploying a novelist's eye for detail and ear for dialogue.
- Hers is an intimate, common and close-up portrayal, full of everyday happenings and concerns.
- The close-up reporting that follows is detailed and selective in its focus.
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