humanize如何读

英:[ˈhju:mənaɪz]

美:[ˈhjuməˌnaɪz]

humanize是什么意思

v.

赋予人性

使通人情

变为有人性

变为有情

humanize自然拼读

hu·man·i·ze

hyu m naIz

humanize变形

第三人称单数:humanizes

现在分词:humanizing

过去式:humanized

过去分词:humanized

humanize扩展

humanization (n.), humanizer (n.)

humanize词根

词根:human

adj.

human 人的;人类的

humane 仁慈的,人道的;高尚的

adv.

humanely 人道地;富人情地;慈悲地

n.

human 人;人类

humanization 人类化;教化

humaneness 深情;慈悲

humanisation 人类化,教化(等于humanization)

humanise 变得有人性;变得仁慈;有教化力(等于humanize)

humanness 为人,为人的资格;人性

vt.

humanise (英)使人性化;使文明化

humanize英英释义

verb

transitive verb

to represent (something) as human : to attribute human qualities to (something)

Much as we try, we can't stop humanizing our horses.—Jeffrey Kluger

to address or portray (someone) in a way that emphasizes that person's humanity or individuality

My goal, long before my father ever became homeless, was to humanize those who lived on the streets.—Diana Kim

to include or increase human interaction in (something, such as a process or place)

[Stan] Lowe said he's proud of the increased use of alternative-dispute resolution for the type of complaint that can be informally resolved between an officer and a member of the public. … "It humanizes the experience from both perspectives. It really does repair a relationship, but you're doing it one relationship at a time."—Louise Dickson

to make (something) humane : soften, civilize

Lincoln forged a new lean language to humanize and redeem the first modern war.—Gary Wills

to cause (a nonhuman organism or one of its parts) to include components (such as cells, tissues, or genes) of human origin or to produce human substances or components (such as insulin) But other forms of humanized mice, such as mice engineered to have a human immune system, are routine laboratory animals that seem to occasion little angst.—Nicholas Wade These "humanized" cells were then removed and cloned with tumor cells to make a cell line that produced pure human monoclonal antibodies, the researchers said.—Warren E. Leary

It's OK to mess with a creature's "simple" parts—the plumbing in its gut, let's say—but we're risking moral crisis when we start to humanize its neural tissue.—Daniel Engber

to modify (a nonhuman antibody) by genetic engineering to contain mainly human protein sequences We're using mice to make humanized antibodies that produce cancer drugs.—William Saletan

Monoclonals are made by cultivating antibody-producing cells in the immune system of mice, extracting them from the animals' spleen, and then going through an elaborate process to "humanize" the antibodies to avoid immune reactions in human patients.—Gary Stix

humanize词源中文解释

大约1600年,“使或使成为人类”,源自 human(形容词)+ -ize。意思是“使文明,使人道主义”来自1640年代。也有 humanise。相关词汇: Humanized; humanizing。1620年代有 Humanify “使成为人类”的记录。

humanize词源英文解释

The first known use of humanize was in 1603

humanize儿童词典英英释义

humanizeverb

to make suitable for human nature or use

to make humane : civilize, refine

humanizeverb

to make suitable for human nature or use

to make humane : civilize, refine

humanize医学词典英英释义

humanizetransitive verb

to cause (a nonhuman organism or one of its parts) to include a component (as cells, tissues, or genes) of human origin or to produce human substances or components (as insulin)"Humanized" mice with human blood-producing stem cells …—Tina Hesman Saey, Science News

Previous attempts at "humanizing" mouse livers have taken weeks or months for the human liver cells to latch onto and expand in the mouse liver, the NIH [National Institutes of Health] reports.—Howard Lovy, FierceBiotech

to modify (a nonhuman antibody) by genetic engineering to contain mainly human protein sequences Dr. Joe Conner, a scientist with Viragen who conducted the experiments, explained that "humanizing an antibody requires removing most of the non-human regions of the protein by genetic engineering and replacing them with equivalent human components."—Anthony J. Brown, Reuters Health Medical News Trastuzumab is a humanized monoclonal antibody whose antigen-binding domain Fab recognizes a tyrosine kinase receptor … that is overexpressed in some breast cancers, and its anticancer activity is thought to involve disruption of cell proliferation signaling through this receptor.—Science

… it is important to humanize these antibodies for human therapeutic purposes without impacting their binding affinity towards antigen targets.—Vinh Dang et al., Clinical and Developmental Immunology

humanize 例句

1 Other family members said the film humanized the two young killers.

2 Sebald is humanized and softened in these essays — a face is given to the cloud — but also darkened.

3 Heisler: I do think that one of the Ever After strengths is that we really do see the loss of her father in a way that we don’t see and it humanizes her.

4 West and Cohen attempt to humanize their subject via these documents, but the effect feels cheesy and hollow, in no small part because of the overabundance of material.

5 The hiring choice, he added, was intended to humanize the pirates and their leader, Abduwali Abdukhadir Muse, who survived but is now serving a prison term in the United States.

6 McCullers had an almost singular ability to humanize any kind of person, many of whom had never appeared in American literature before she created them.

7 But the filmmakers adroitly make up for that, and add a crucial humanizing element, by focusing on the women’s conflicted but supportive parents, who are co-stars of the documentary.

8 Eggers wants to humanize immigrants, but in his telling, something very different seems to occur.

9 Artists, often taking their cues from apocryphal literature and legend, have remade Church history for centuries, perhaps no more strikingly than the sanitizing and humanizing of Jerome.

10 But the writers don't excuse his atrocriousness by humanizing him, which makes one wonder what this show endeavors to say about the undeniable charisma of monstrous people.

11 In addition to humanizing Aiken, the ad roots him in North Carolina.

12 But the details of the musical life serve a purpose: They help humanize the already appealing Diamond.

13 Petrosky's words would humanize the story and persuade even the most jaded Senators to listen.

彼得罗夫斯基的证词将使整个故事人性化,即使最不耐烦的参议员也会倾听。

14 These wrenching stories humanize the stakes of a health initiative that found itself and its employees at risk from a toxic mix of politics, propaganda and terrorism.

15 The series eventually approaches the issue in a way that humanizes both the victims and their perpetrators in the church hierarchy.

16 “Tapped Out” manages to humanize a sport once demonized as “human cockfighting” by deconstructing the stereotype of the martial-arts tough guy.

17 The film probably does a better job than the books of humanizing the Prop 8 case and explaining its context with well-edited momentum.

18 It's a welcome attempt to humanize Hampton, but his public purpose overshadows private concerns, both in the film and in reality.

19 But she has died of cancer, and her absence is one of this novel’s most vital and humanizing aspects.

20 She humanizes Nora’s thinking even as she exposes her blind spots.

humanize 同义词

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