schematise การใช้
- Instead, neuroscientists use an alternate method as schematised in Figure 2.
- Her compositions follow minimalistic motifs with intense use of keyboards, schematising carefully staged soundscapes.
- He did not exaggerate or over-schematise in order to obtain or attract attention for his ideas.
- Finally, the "'gender-politics model "'is an attempt to schematise abuse of women as attempts by males in general to maintain their position of power over females.
- In Effigies of Turbulent Yesterdays we have a clash of different linguistic registers, with the powerful mimetic realism of the equestrian portrait meeting head on the schematised fountain of blood that springs from it, whose sources one can trace to miniature painting as well as comic book illustration.
- These forms are grouped to lead the viewer through a schematised narrative not only of the human ( and all of nature's ) cycle of birth, reproduction and death, but also of the evolution of life, on earth, from the water to the land and finally to the air.
- Others are dramatic and lyrical, e . g . " The Miracle of Light " ( 1931-2 ), which employs his characteristic high viewpoint over a schematised landscape with patches of brilliant colour and a non-naturalistic perspective reminiscent of pre-Renaissance painting; over the whole are three rainbows, in non-naturalistic colour.
- [the ] duality of form and content was replaced ( to over-schematise briefly ) by a triad of " content " ( better described in Brecht's case by the formalist term " material " ), " form " ( again the formalist term " technique " is more useful here ) and " function ".
- In particular, " Cr韙h Gablach " gives a highly schematised and unrealistic account of how the king spends his week : Sunday is for drinking ale, Monday is for judging, Tuesday is for playing fidchell, Wednesday is for watching hounds hunt, Thursday is for racing horses, and Saturday is for judging ( a different word from Monday, but the distinction is unclear ).
- It may seem to be a bizarre occupation for a group of highly qualified men of science, indeed, as Haddon states : " I can imagine that some people would think we were demented or at least wasting our time . " and they are also credited as inventing a system of nomenclature that enabled them to be able to schematise the steps required and teach a variety of string tricks to European audiences.
- The play finds its origin in Beckett s fascination with Albrecht D黵er's famous etching of praying hands, a reproduction of which had hung in his room at Cooldrinagh as a child, however " the dark, empty room with its rectangle of light and its black-coated figure hunched over the table, resembled a schematised seventeenth century Dutch painting even more explicitly than " Ohio Impromptu " . ".