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conventionalisingの例文

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  • It's not a particularly common or conventionalised literary device either.
  • The content of the poems is highly conventionalised.
  • It is not as conventionalised or complex as natural sign languages, and has a limited lexicon.
  • This implication flows from the conventionalised symbolic meanings which the natural objects described in the poem have.
  • Frequently used slang also have become conventionalised into memetic " unit [ s ] of cultural information ".
  • It is an attempt to generate enquiry into the greater spheres of understanding which lie beyond conventionalised intellection.
  • Under Monteverdi's followers, the distinction between the recitative and the aria became more marked and conventionalised.
  • Tamil poems are conventionalised, and the descriptions of nature used in them have a clear and rigid symbolism.
  • The orthography of a language is the usage of a specific script to write a language according to a conventionalised usage.
  • Surviving Byzantine art is mostly religious and with exceptions at certain periods is highly conventionalised, following traditional models that translate carefully controlled church theology into artistic terms.
  • This can be the source of some confusion when comparing gears unless it is clear whether gear inches have been calculated using the actual wheel size or a conventionalised 27 ".
  • The cartoon image of stolid, stocky, conservative and well-meaning John Bull, dressed like an English country squire, sometimes explicitly contrasted with the conventionalised scrawny, French revolutionary " sans-culottes"
  • Formulae could also be combined into " type-scenes ", longer, conventionalised depictions of generic actions in epic, such as the steps taken to arm oneself or to prepare a ship for sea.
  • The key idea of the theory is poets have a store of formulas ( a formula being'an expression that is regularly used, under the same metrical conditions, to express a particular essential idea') and that by linking these in conventionalised ways, they can rapidly compose verse.
  • The monolith, situated next to a channel of water in the bottom of the chasm, is covered in unfamiliar hieroglyphs " consisting for the most part of conventionalised aquatic symbols such as fishes, eels, octopuses, crustaceans, molluscs, whales and the like . " There are also " crude sculptures " depicting:
  • In English, I can imagine something like " The river is moving-or is it ? " or " The river is moving-and yet it isn't . " I'd say that English constructions such as " yes and no " and " X is Y-ing-or is it ? " are actually more commonplace and conventionalised than the Russian phrase under discussion.
  • These metaphors can help to make Petruchio's cruelty acceptable by making it seem limited and conventionalised . " Marvin Bennet Krims argues that " the play leans heavily on representations of cruelty for its comedic effect . " He believes cruelty permeates the entire play, including the Induction, arguing the Sly frame, with the Lord's spiteful practical joke, prepares the audience for a play willing to treat cruelty as a comedic matter.