nuance / ˈnu ɑns, ˈnyu-, nuˈɑns, nyu-; French nüˈɑ̃s /

⚽高中词汇细微差别细微的差别细微之处细微的差异

nuance 的定义

n. 名词 noun

plural nu·anc·es [noo-ahn-siz, nyoo-, noo-ahn-siz, nyoo-; French ny-ahns]. /ˈnu ɑn sɪz, ˈnyu-, nuˈɑn sɪz, nyu-; French nüˈɑ̃s/.

  1. a subtle difference or distinction in expression, meaning, response, etc.
  2. a very slight difference or variation in color or tone.

nuance 近义词

n. 名词 noun

slight difference; shading

更多nuance例句

  1. It can be tempting to defer the nuances of this challenge for another day in favor of hacking a people strategy that meets the most basic needs of hiring quickly.
  2. Voice, on the other hand, allows users to utilize all the nuances and complexities of inflection and tone, letting them convey additional meaning and subtext that eliminates ambiguity and enables deeper connections with the audience.
  3. Given the high volume of brand advertising consumers are subjected to each day in ad supported experiences, contextual nuance works.
  4. Their output, which is highlighted in an eye-opening new pop-up collection at the MoMA Design Store, serves as a corrective to the long-misunderstood nuances of female anatomy and psyche.
  5. This is the narrative many people still hold about polls and the 2016 election, and while there is some truth to it, it’s missing a lot of nuance.
  6. He has none of the subtlety and nuance of black conservative academics such as Thomas Sowell and Walter Williams.
  7. What these trips show is that there is a bit of nuance to life in North Korea.
  8. You can agree or disagree with our perspective, but at least acknowledge that vital nuance.
  9. I do not envy him this ministry of reconciliation, which is fraught with complexity and nuance.
  10. Mistakes happen, nuance is often lost, and everything is seen through a prism of who is winning and who is losing.
  11. I grinned, watching every play of emotion on his face, and carefully weighing every nuance in his tone of voice.
  12. One feels that in the three centuries since Monna Lisa love has taken on a new and subtler nuance.
  13. He lived in London until his death, without once leaving England; and that gives to his pictures a distinct nuance.
  14. Each company established for the performance of this comedy gave a fresh nuance to the combinations which the show permitted.
  15. Each carried its own nuance, its quite separate implication, and somehow the later term took higher ground.