pantomime

导读:pantomime怎么读
英式音标:[ˈpæntəmaɪm] 美式音标:[ˈpæntəˌmaɪm]
pantomime基本解释 n. 哑剧;舞剧;手势vi. 打手势;演哑剧vt. 打手势;演哑剧 pantomime的意思释义 n.哑

pantomime怎么读

英式音标:[ˈpæntəmaɪm]

美式音标:[ˈpæntəˌmaɪm]

pantomime基本解释

n. 哑剧;舞剧;手势

vi. 打手势;演哑剧

vt. 打手势;演哑剧

pantomime的意思释义

n.

哑剧;童话剧;手势;

vi.

打手势;演哑剧;

变形

复数:pantomimes

英英释义

pantomime[ \'pæntəmaim ]

n.a performance using gestures and body movements without words

同义词:mimedumb show

v.act out without words but with gestures and bodily movements only

同义词:mime

pantomime用法及例句

双语例句

用作名词(n.)

The actor is skilled in pantomime.

这个演员擅长表演哑剧。

The audience roared with laughter at the pantomime.

观众被这哑剧逗得哈哈大笑。

The children were very excited by the pantomime.

孩子们看了童话剧非常兴奋。

Some tourists make themselves understood abroad by pantomime.

一些游客在国外通常用手势来让别人明白自己的意思。

用作动词(v.)

Apes are routinely beaten into submission and forced to pantomime human behaviors that are foreign and confusing.

猿类被屈打得顺从,被迫模仿对于它们来说是莫名其妙,难以理解的人类行为举止。

例句参考

Pantomime comprehension and ideomotor apraxia.

DISTURBANCE OF GESTURE AND PANTOMIME IN APHASIA

Pantomime of tool use depends on integrity of left inferior frontal cortex.

Defective pantomime of object use in left brain damage: apraxia or asymbolia?

Imitation and pantomime in high-functioning adolescents with autism spectrum disorders.

Differences in the visual control of pantomimed and natural grasping movements

Functional MRI correlates of real and imagined tool-use pantomimes.

What does the brain do when you fake it? An FMRI study of pantomimed and real grasping.

Recognition and imitation of pantomimed motor acts after unilateral parietal and premotor lesions: A perspective on apraxia.

A common network in the left cerebral hemisphere represents planning of tool use pantomimes and familiar intransitive gestures at th...

pantomime词源

pantomime

pantomime: [17] In ancient Rome, a pantomīmus was a ‘mime artist’, a sort of Marcel Marceau performer who acted scenes, incidents, etc without words. The term was adopted from Greek pantómōmos ‘complete imitator’, a compound formed from panto- ‘all’ and mōmos ‘imitator, actor’ (source of English mime). English originally took the word over in this historical sense, and it was not until the early 18th century that it began to be used first for a sort of mime ballet and then for a play without words, relating a popular tale, which gradually developed into the Christmas fairy-tale pantomimes of the 19th and 20th centuries.The abbreviation panto dates from the mid-19th century.=> mime

pantomime (n.)

1610s, \"mime actor,\" from Latin pantomimus \"mime, dancer,\" from Greek pantomimos \"actor,\" literally \"imitator of all,\" from panto- (genitive of pan) \"all\" (see pan-) + mimos \"imitator\" (see mime (n.)).Meaning \"drama or play without words\" first recorded 1735. The English dramatic performances so called, usually at Christmas and with words and songs and stock characters, are attested by this name from 1739; said to have originated c. 1717. Related: Pantomimic; pantomimical.

pantomime (v.)

1768, from pantomime (n.). Related: Pantomimed; pantomiming.

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