renaissance如何读

英:[rɪˈneɪsns]

美:[ˈrenəsɑːns]

renaissance英汉释义

n.(名词)
  1. [S]文艺复兴,文艺复兴时期 the period in Europe between the 14th and 17th centuries,when the art,literature,and ideas of ancient Greece were discovered again and widely studied

renaissance是什么意思

n. (名词)
  1. 文艺复兴
  2. 复活,复兴,新生,再生
  3. 文艺复兴时期(欧洲 14、15 和 16 世纪时,人们以古希腊罗马的思想文化来繁荣文学艺术)
  4. 复兴时代
  5. 文艺复兴时期的风格
adj. (形容词)
  1. 文艺复兴的,文艺复兴时期的
  2. 文艺复兴时期风格的,文艺复兴式的

renaissance自然拼读

ren·ais·sance

re n sans [or] re n sans

renaissance英英释义

noun

a rebirth, renewal, or revival.

(cap.) a cultural movement in Europe, dating from the fourteenth to the seventeenth century, that begin with a revival of interest in classical Greek and Roman culture and learning and gave rise to the development of new forms and ideas in science, art, architecture, and literature (prec. by "the").The works of the artists Michelangelo and Leonardo da Vinci were inspired by the Renaissance.

(cap.) this period in European history, which marks the end of the medieval period and the beginning of the modern period (prec. by "the").

adjective

(cap.) pertaining to the artistic, intellectual, and architectural styles of ancient Greece and Rome which were revived in Europe primarily during the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries.

(cap.) relating to the cultural manifestations of the Renaissance.

renaissance词组

renaissance mann. 文艺复兴人;多才多艺的人

early renaissance[建]早期文艺复兴的艺术风格;文艺复兴初期(1378-1500)

harlem renaissance哈莱姆文艺复兴

high renaissance文艺复兴盛期

renaissance humanismn. 文艺复兴时期的人文主义

renaissance词源中文解释

"文艺复兴是欧洲从14世纪开始的一段以古典艺术和学问为基础的伟大复兴时期",1840年,源自法语 renaissance des lettres,源自古法语 renaissance,字面意思是"重生",通常指精神上的重生,源自 renastre 的意思是"重新生长"(植物),"再次出生"(现代法语 renaître),源自 Vulgar Latin *renascere,源自 Latin renasci 的意思是"再次出生,再次出现,再次更新",源自 re- 的意思是"再次"(参见 re-)+ nasci 的意思是"出生"(古拉丁语 gnasci,源自 PIE 词根 *gene- 的意思是"生育,产生")。

早期的称呼是 revival of learning(1785年)。在一般用法中,以小写的 r-,指的是长期衰败或废弃的任何事物(尤其是学问、文学、艺术)的复兴,可追溯到1855年。

[Renaissance] was so far established as the English word for the thing before it was latinized or anglicized into renascence that it is still the more intelligible of the two, & may well be left in possession. [Henry W. Fowler, "Modern English Usage," Oxford: 1926. He does, however, recommend pronouncing it as English, "rinā'sns."]
在拉丁化或英语化为 renascence 之前, [Renaissance] 已经成为英语中表示这个概念的词,因此它仍然是两者中更易理解的,并且可以继续使用。[Henry W. Fowler,《现代英语用法》,牛津:1926年。然而,他建议将其发音为英语中的"rinā'sns"]

作为形容词,"与文艺复兴有关的",1842年开始使用。Renaissance man 最早可追溯到1885年,基本意思是"在文艺复兴时期活着的人"; 到1898年,特指"展示文艺复兴时期理想化人物的美德和特征",人文主义、学问、多样的成就、思想和个性的自由; 到1949年,用于描述现代或活着的人,有时仅表示"全面发展的"。

renaissance词源英文解释

French, from Middle French, rebirth, from Old French renaistre to be born again, from Latin renasci, from re- + nasci to be born — more at nation

The first known use of renaissance was in 1837

renaissance儿童词典英英释义

renascentadjective

rising again into being or more intense activity or effect

renascencenoun

renaissance sense 2

renameverb

to give a new name to

renameverb

to give a new name to

renaladjective

relating to, involving, or located in the region of the kidneys

renaissancenoun

capitalized the period of European history between the 14th and 17th centuries marked by a flourishing of art and literature inspired by ancient times and by the beginnings of modern science

often capitalized a movement or period of great activity (as in literature, science, and the arts)

renaissance 例句

1 It’s my honor and pleasure to salute You, a true Renaissance man of Harlem.

2 I grew to hate the growing pages of my dissertation on genre and Renaissance literature.

3 So in ancient Rome, whose texts Vergil knew exceptionally well, and in the Renaissance prior to 1492, there was no concept of discovery.

4 There are probably fewer hard facts about the life of Henry Purcell than that of any other great composer since the Renaissance.

有关亨利·普赛尔生平的可靠资料可能比任何其他文艺复兴以来的伟大作曲家都要少。

5 “Since we can’t learn everything about the Italian Renaissance today, let’s learn everything about the Egyptian rooms. That will be our lesson instead.”

6 to experience a renaissance

经历复兴

7 Even Vesalius, the first great anatomist of the Renaissance, was not in the business of claiming priority, which is why, for all his originality, there are no parts of the body named after him.

8 The fine arts revived during the Renaissance.

在文艺复兴时期美术复兴了.

9 The Savoy, the Golden Gate, and the Renaissance ballrooms battled for the crowds—the Savoy introduced such attractions as Thursday Kitchen Mechanics’ Nights, bathing beauty contests, and a new car given away each Saturday night.

10 Dating the end of the Renaissance is no easier than dating the beginning—you could say that it is still going on.

11 We spent a month reading poetry from the Harlem Renaissance in our English class.

12 Vitruvius described something like perspective painting, but the Renaissance invented a new combination of subjectivity and objectivity, the situated viewer and the vanishing point.

13 She is like nearly every other woman in the Renaissance.

14 the 19th-century literary renaissance that prompted people to refer to Boston as the Athens of America

15 Innovation, classicality and humanity are characteristics of the architecture of humanism in Renaissance.

创新性 、 古典性和人文性是文艺复兴时期人文主义建筑的主要特点.

16 Her art teacher had said that the Renaissance was a period of glorification of the human form; as best she could figure out, that meant bare bodies.

17 This was, indeed, the way things were at the start of the Renaissance.

18 For many people in the Renaissance, what makes something true is whether it makes sense abstractly.

19 There was something Renaissance about the pose, but it was princes I thought of, not coiffed and ringleted maidens.

20 But as he was taken up in the universities of medieval and Renaissance Europe his works became a textbook of acquired knowledge, not a project to provoke further enquiry.

renaissance 同义词

2 文艺复兴时期的美术或建筑的式样

renascence

5 文艺复兴的

Renaissant

8 重新流行

revival revive come back

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