materialization / məˈtɪər i əˌlaɪz /

实物化实体化实质化实化

materialization2 个定义

v. 无主动词 verb

ma·te·ri·al·ized, ma·te·ri·al·iz·ing.

  1. to come into perceptible existence; appear; become actual or real; be realized or carried out: Our plans never materialized.
  2. to assume material or bodily form; become corporeal: The ghost materialized before Hamlet.
v. 有主动词 verb

ma·te·ri·al·ized, ma·te·ri·al·iz·ing.

  1. to give material form to; realize: to materialize an ambition.
  2. to invest with material attributes: to materialize abstract ideas with metaphors.
  3. to make physically perceptible; cause to appear in bodily form.
  4. to render materialistic.

materialization 近义词

n. 名词 noun

effect

n. 名词 noun

embodiment

n. 名词 noun

fulfillment

更多materialization例句

  1. Our polls, Senate polls, gov polls, presidential polls, Republican polls, public polls, turnout modeling and prognosticators all pointed to one political environment — that environment never materialized.
  2. Many nearby buildings remained boarded-up in anticipation of unrest that failed to materialize.
  3. It might just take a while longer for those efforts to materialize.
  4. We had started to sense a spike search for it in July, but it never materialized.
  5. Yet Sanders’s 2020 bid failed, in part because he based his electoral strategy on a massive surge in youth turnout that didn’t materialize as much as his campaign expected.
  6. This striking change but too faithfully represents the corresponding degradation and materialization of religious belief.
  7. Besides them, there are equal numbers of people who believe in the materialization of spirits.
  8. She held out a hope of materialization later, but she wasn't sure she could compass that for some time to come.
  9. Materialization, of course, called for a darkened room, and Shelby's naturally suspicious mind was alert for possible fraud.
  10. It always exhausts me utterly to induce a materialization, and I doubt if I can achieve anything more to-night.