dramatise

dramatise

美 [ˈdræməˌtaɪz]  英 [ˈdræmətaɪz]

  • v.将…改编成剧本;将…搬上(舞台或银幕);使戏剧化;戏剧性地表现
  • 网络改编成为戏剧;夸大报导;改编戏剧

词形变化

第三人称单数:dramatizes  现在分词:dramatizing  过去式:dramatized  

反义词

同义词

英汉双解

v.
1.
[t]
~ sth
将…改编成剧本;将…搬上(舞台或银幕)to present a book, an event, etc. as a play or a film/movie
2.
[t][i]
~ (sth)
使戏剧化;戏剧性地表现;夸张to make sth seem more exciting or important than it really is
Don't worry too much about what she said─she tends to dramatize things.
别太在意她说的话 — 她往往言过其实。

英汉解释

v.
1.
(把小说等)改编为剧本
2.
演戏似地表现;把...戏剧化;使引人注目
3.
具有戏剧性;适于改编为剧本
4.
(演戏似地)作假

英英解释

v.

例句

As a former Hollywood actor, Ronald Reagan was never afraid to dramatise what he saw as the greatest economic threat of the 1970s and 1980s.

好莱坞演员罗纳德•里根(RonaldReagan认为世纪7080年最大经济威胁轻松作出戏剧性描述

Now Sarah Helm, wife of Powell, writes a play, Loyalty, to dramatise her anguish over the war.

现在鲍威尔妻子萨拉·海姆,忠诚戏剧夸张表达愤怒

There is no need to dramatise what he has done, he was a great friend and great president for me.

没有必要夸张描述什么来说一个伟大朋友伟大主席

Other outfits are making films that dramatise Bible stories as faithfully as possible.

其他尽可能忠实地圣经故事电影

But I also do not want to dramatise things.

不想什么事情复杂化

Remember to dramatise these facts when you include them in your screenplay.

记住这些事实戏剧性编织剧本

"I will not dramatise the situation as has been done by some . . . on the basis of an analysis that is not necessarily correct" .

不会某些那样根据未必正确分析……情况戏剧化

However, we can't over- dramatise it, the season is long.

但是我们不要夸张毕竟赛季