histrionical / ˌhɪs triˈɒn ɪk /

历史性的历史学历史性历史的

histrionical2 个定义

adj. 形容词 adjective

Also his·tri·on·i·cal.

  1. of or relating to actors or acting.
  2. deliberately affected or self-consciously emotional; overly dramatic, in behavior or speech.
n. 名词 noun
  1. an actor.

histrionical 近义词

adj. 形容词 adjective

dramatic

更多histrionical例句

  1. If there’s a point to this exercise, it gets lost amid so many histrionic reenactments of scenes we’ve seen replayed on the news and parodied in late-night comedy for more than two decades.
  2. While King’s narrative romanticizes the relationship between mental illness and creativity, Larraín’s histrionic direction often reduces these elements to camp.
  3. We get an amusingly histrionic psychological thriller from Plaza and a clever Ronald Reagan pastiche from Duplass and actor-producer Ethan Sandler.
  4. The moral duties and doubts of adulthood are swapped out for the histrionic creeds of adolescence.
  5. Silver Linings Playbook allowed her to explode, playing a woman unhinged, histrionic, and emotionally volatile.
  6. Wall Street Journal editorial-page writer Dorothy Rabinowitz recorded a histrionic anti-bike video that went viral.
  7. Such miscues mired the show in histrionic soapiness, upsetting the delicate balance between domestic drama and social change.
  8. In fact, The Newsroom seems to relish putting loud women in their place or to render them helpless and histrionic.
  9. This rare merit even the most fastidious critic must allow: but her histrionic essay is, in another respect, equally remarkable.
  10. She has inherited the histrionic gift from her mother—from me.
  11. Histrionic art always and everywhere suffers from the ephemeral conditions under which it has to be externalised.
  12. In the midst of her histrionic triumphs, Mlle. Clairon continued her career of gallantry.
  13. Here she trained a number of aspirants to histrionic fame, several of whom were destined to make their mark in years to come.