modernism / ˈmɒd ərˌnɪz əm /

💦中学词汇现代主义现代派现代化主义现代性

modernism 的定义

n. 名词 noun
  1. modern character, tendencies, or values; adherence to or sympathy with what is modern.
  2. a modern usage or characteristic.
  3. Theology. the movement in Roman Catholic thought that sought to interpret the teachings of the Church in the light of philosophic and scientific conceptions prevalent in the late 19th and early 20th centuries: condemned by Pope Pius X in 1907.the liberal theological tendency in Protestantism in the 20th century.
  4. a deliberate philosophical and practical estrangement or divergence from the past in the arts and literature occurring especially in the course of the 20th century and taking form in any of various innovative movements and styles.

modernism 近义词

modernism

等同于 innovation

更多modernism例句

  1. Alfred Stieglitz began exhibiting photographs in New York in the early 1900s as part of his project of introducing modernism to America.
  2. Secular modernism has tried to get the fruits of the Jesus-message without the roots.
  3. It’s that I think it might produce a new kind of literature, like the way modernism transformed the novel.
  4. Having been taught Modernism, a school of thought that scoffs at the decorative, materials became his primary means of expression.
  5. European Jews gravitated toward modernism as a way to get away from history.
  6. What every fan of modernism may not know is that all of these designers were Jewish.
  7. In the early years—the 1920s and 1930s—modernism was seen as “out there.”
  8. In America, modernism was stripped of its socialist leanings.
  9. Immanence—Agnosticism is the negative side of Modernism; immanence constitutes its positive constituent.
  10. That its measures were effective is evident from the history of Modernism in the last three years.
  11. They are the quaint quintessence of conservatism, and will occupy youthful minds menaced by modernism.
  12. Too angry to deny the convenient charge of "modernism," he sought the street.
  13. He bowed his head, revolving in his mind the definite charge of "modernism."