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image

/im-ij/US // ˈɪm ɪdʒ //UK // (ˈɪmɪdʒ) //

形象,图像,影像,画面

Related Words

Definitions

n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : a physical likeness or representation of a person, animal, or thing, photographed, painted, sculptured, or otherwise made visible.
    • : an optical counterpart or appearance of an object, as is produced by reflection from a mirror, refraction by a lens, or the passage of luminous rays through a small aperture and their reception on a surface.
    • : a mental representation; idea; conception.
    • : Psychology. a mental representation of something previously perceived, in the absence of the original stimulus.
    • : form; appearance; semblance: We are all created in God's image.
    • : counterpart; copy: That child is the image of his mother.
    • : a symbol; emblem.
    • : the general or public perception of a company, public figure, etc., especially as achieved by careful calculation aimed at creating widespread goodwill.
    • : a type; embodiment: Red-faced and angry, he was the image of frustration.
    • : a description of something in speech or writing: Keats created some of the most beautiful images in the language.
    • : Rhetoric. a figure of speech, especially a metaphor or a simile.
    • : an idol or representation of a deity: They knelt down before graven images.
    • : Mathematics. the point or set of points in the range corresponding to a designated point in the domain of a given function.
    • : Archaic. an illusion or apparition.
v.有主动词 verb
  1. 1

    im·aged, im·ag·ing.

    • : to picture or represent in the mind; imagine; conceive.
    • : to make an image of; portray in sculpture, painting, etc.
    • : to project on a surface: Familiar scenes were imaged on the screen.
    • : to reflect the likeness of; mirror.
    • : to set forth in speech or writing; describe.
    • : to symbolize; typify.
    • : to resemble.
    • : Informal. to create an image for: The candidate had to be imaged before being put on the campaign trail.
    • : to transform into an exact replica in a different form, as changing digital data to pixels for display on a screen or representing a medical scan of a body part in digital form.

Synonyms & Antonyms

nounrepresentation; counterpart
Forms: images

Examples

  • If a pixel of the satellite image, which covers 1 square kilometer, contains fire, it is labeled a hot spot.

  • In this very speech, he took a passing shot at “highly political” district attorneys trying “to remake state and local prosecutorial offices in their preferred progressive image.”

  • Brand takeovers typically run for three to five seconds and are either videos or images.

  • The record number of women running for Congress is official after the last state primary, Barbados will remove the Queen as its head of state, and a model attempts to reclaim her image.

  • A week after the image was taken, things have only gone worse on the West Coast.

  • The effort to sterilize his image first began when Epstein hired Los Angeles-based spin doctors Sitrick Co.

  • Oh, and the first press image they released was a pair of black dudes in tracksuits as a troll of sorts to NME.

  • Of course, Kim Jong-Un takes an image hit as a Katy Perry-obsessed, margarita-drinking maniac with daddy issues.

  • When his agent asked if he missed his wife, his mind flashed to an image of Alison.

  • What image are you hoping people who pick up this book and read it, come away with?

  • This harmless image of a fierce beast Yung Pak would pull about the floor with a string by the hour.

  • The object is to produce a concurrence or connection between the sight-image of the Person and a sound-image of his Name.

  • In return, each of the priests placed an image of Buddha on a tree-root, turning it into an altar.

  • The stainless image fearing to disturb,So faithfully reflected in my breast;As winds disturb the mirror of the lake.

  • The image stillWas seen, and in the sun's uncertain lightAbove my couch she seemed to linger still.