英:[eksˌtɪərɪ'ɒrətɪ]
美:[eksˌtɪrɪ'ɒrətɪ]
英:[eksˌtɪərɪ'ɒrətɪ]
美:[eksˌtɪrɪ'ɒrətɪ]
noun
the quality or state of being exterior or exteriorized : externality
The first known use of exteriority was in 1611
1 To be alive is to grapple with these two truths, to struggle at the intersection of self and society, interiority and exteriority, individuality and environment.
2 The words "exteriority" and "interiority" show up more than once.
3 Horror films scare us through exteriority: Image and sound come together to create the illusion of danger.
4 For them performance and exteriority are central to their self-presentation, far more so than any lyrical message.
5 Varda’s life and work are filled with contrasts between interiority and exteriority, individuals and their worlds, which makes her house on Rue Daguerre, with its pink facade and striped doors, feel like another auteurist creation.
6 So, I might add, does the exteriority of Mr. Rush’s bravura performance.
7 I chose to change my exteriority to bring it closer into alignment with my interiority.
8 Photos, which are often poised and polished, have a sense of exteriority to them; they are meant to be shown and shared.
9 That focus on exteriority feels like a means to treat her interiority as sacred and preserve it until she is safe.
10 A work of fierce interiority has been turned into a hollow exercise in exteriority.
11 This form enabled me to segue seamlessly between the past and the present, character interiority and exteriority.
12 And we were trying to do both the interiority and the exteriority of the character and the situation.”
13 Where they part is in exteriority and ego: Wagner deals with expansion and limitlessness, while Beckett drills deeper into the idea of limitation, nowhere to go.
14 This feeling of exteriority of sound seems to require transmission through the membrana tympani.
15 They are too much identified to find in each other that sense of support and countenance which requires a feeling of the exteriority of our friend's life to our own.
16 There is also that of exteriority, of space, of position, and, by opposition, that of external or psychological events.
17 Hawthorne freely confesses to this constant exteriority, and appears to have been perfectly conscious of it.
18 For Levinas, any answer to the question of Being lies in exteriority.
19 Or the writers could give Lexi more interiority and less exteriority.
20 The evidence of the eventfulness of that life — its exteriority — is extensive, to say the least.