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science fiction

科幻小说,科幻,科幻片,科幻作品

Related Words

Definitions

n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : a form of fiction that draws imaginatively on scientific knowledge and speculation in its plot, setting, theme, etc.

Synonyms & Antonyms

Examples

  • The science fiction imagination is a nomad on an endless expedition and the result is a literature of the psyche, torn between the heart that yearns for home and the mind too restless to stay still.

  • A young couple fights to hold their relationship together in the midst of pandemic, where a memory loss virus is robbing everyone of their memories in Little Fish, a new science fiction romantic drama from IFC Films.

  • To relax, he would often play chess with another faculty member, Daniel Keyes, author of the heartbreaking science fiction masterpiece “Flowers for Algernon.”

  • Our cosmos is violent, evolving and filled with science fiction–like possibilities that actually come straight out of general relativity.

  • While at OED, Sheidlower noted that science fiction was an area that was not very well served by scholarship, partly because science fiction hasn't had much serious literary cache historically.

  • As an example of good science-and-society policymaking, the history of fluoride may be more of a cautionary tale.

  • Citizens, perhaps, need to feel like they can communicate something to science.

  • “I heard Jeffrey was interested in supporting science and I contacted him,” Krauss said.

  • The pulps brought new readers to serious fiction, making it less intimidating with alluring art and low prices.

  • “We talked about the science the whole time the other day,” Krauss told The Daily Beast in a phone interview.

  • As the weeks wore on, the pretence of practical teaching was quietly dropped, and we crammed our science out of the text-book.

  • I cannot see in science, nor in experience, nor in history any signs of such a God, nor of such intervention.

  • A true history of the Merrill Horse, and the adventures of its different members, would read like the most exciting fiction.

  • Science teaches that man existed during the glacial epoch, which was at least fifty thousand years before the Christian era.

  • Probably they do not devote quite as much time to it as our caballeros, who are quite adepts in the science.