英:[ˌverɪ'sɪmɪlə]
美:[ˌverə'sɪmələ]
英:[ˌverɪ'sɪmɪlə]
美:[ˌverə'sɪmələ]
ver·i·sim·i·lar
ve r sI m lr
verisimilarly (adv.), verisimilarity (n.)
Adjective
1. appearing to be true or real;
"a verisimilar tale"
Latin vērī similis, vērīsimilis "having the appearance of truth" (from vērī, genitive of vērum "truth," noun derivative of vērus "true" + similis "like, similar") + -ar — more at very >entry 2, same >entry 1
The first known use of verisimilar was in 1681
1 In Fernando Sorrentino's fiction there is a curious mixture of fantasy and humour that sometimes comes in a grotesque framework, and always in a verisimilar one.
费尔南多·索伦提诺的小说风格奇异,亦真亦幻,虚幻与幽默神秘地交织在一起。
2 Annie’s work thus far has been meticulously verisimilar, bordering on minimalist, with depopulated nurseries and studios built of balsa wood.
3 But formerly, and especially by the theoreticians, by verisimilar was understood historical credibility, or that historical truth which is not demonstrable, but conjecturable, not true, but verisimilar.
4 Are these dramas of his not verisimilar only, but true; nay, truer than reality itself, since the essence of unmixed reality is bodied forth in them under more expressive symbols?
5 Antonyms: unlikelihood, improbability. likely, a. probable, verisimilar; good-looking, comely; appropriate.
6 "I have not," he says, "so much art left me to make any thing agreeable, or verisimilar, wherewith to amuse or deceive the people."
7 Various anecdotes of him are related by Boccaccio, Sacchetti, and others, none of them verisimilar, and some of them at least fifteen centuries old when revamped.
8 If "verisimilar" be translated by "coherent," a most exact meaning will often be found in the discussions, examples, and judgments of the critics.
9 Extravagant as are the situations in La Nuit et le Moment, the other best thing, they are, but for the longueurs already censured, singularly verisimilar on their own postulates.
10 Charming, but in no proper sense of the word natural or verisimilar.
11 As Actress unfurls we’re exposed to a mix of personal, verisimilar moments and artful vignettes.
12 His polemic against the French school is chiefly directed to claiming a place in poetry for the verisimilar, as against absolute historical exactitude.
13 But our poet hath not so much art left him as to frame any thing agreeable, or verisimilar, to amuse the people, or wherewith to deceive them.
14 And there the effect is not only verisimilar but wonderful in its verisimilitude.
15 But the ridiculous must no longer come forward as the pure creation of his own fancy, but must be verisimilar, that is, seem to be real.
16 Now, I am to perform all this, it seems, without making any thing verisimilar or agreeable!
17 The origin of the primitive inhabitants of the West Indian Archipelago has been the subject of much learned controversy, ending, like all such discussions, in different theories and more or less verisimilar conjecture.
18 Who does not recall the great part played in literary history by the criticism of the verisimilar?
19 Aesthetic truths for Baumgarten were those which did not seem altogether false or altogether true: in fact, the verisimilar.
20 Thus the fancy takes the place of the verisimilar of certain students of Aristotle.
1 逼真
true natural living graphic authentic speaking faithful inevitable vivid photographic three-dimensional lifelike reality fidelity vraisemblance to the quick
2 可能
like possible potential liable mortal feasible contingent thinkable just perhaps possibly potentially presumably mayhap presumedly aiblins possibility likelihood likeliness will May might capacitate susceptible probable presumable assumably Can probability allow so that may in posse susceptible of be on the cards chances are moral eventual presumptive maybe doubtless belike ought as likely as not in a fair way conceivable ever perchance peradventure fear permit
3 或然的
4 或然