| 单词 | motif | 
| 释义 | motifn. I.  Senses relating to themes or emblems.  1.   a.  Art and Architecture. A (usually recurrent) feature of a composition, esp. a distinctive or salient one; the structural principle or dominant idea of a work; an object or group of objects forming a distinct element of a design; any small design or symbol. Also: a particular type of subject for artistic treatment. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > the arts > visual arts > work of art > 			[noun]		 > motif motive1842 motif1848 art form1887 the mind > mental capacity > perception or cognition > faculty of ideation > topic, subject-matter > materials of topic > 			[noun]		 > distinctive element motif1848 motive1893 trope1975 1848    A. Jameson Sacred & Legendary Art 		(1850)	 87  				The motif is simple and not easily mistaken. 1850    Ecclesiologist 11 121  				Regular stalls would not have suited the motif of the arrangement. 1881    Cornhill Mag. Mar. 309  				The main motif of this landscape was the indescribable Carrara range. 1883    A. H. Church Precious Stones 29  				Arrangements of precious stones in which the leading motif is either identity, or seriation, or contrast. 1935    ‘E. Queen’ Spanish Cape Myst. iii  				There were beach umbrellas over saucy round tables in a prevailing motif of Spanish reds and yellows. 1958    R. K. Narayan Guide v. 73  				The wall-painting represented episodes from the epics and mythology, and all kinds of patterns and motifs. 1970    N. Pevsner Cambridgeshire (Buildings of Eng.) 		(ed. 2)	 94  				So Hawksmoor had a second model made, with..a simple lunette window..as the central motif between them. 1990    Do it Yourself Apr. 11 		(caption)	  				The Cottage Garden suite from Armitage Shanks has an attractive motif on the sanitaryware.  b.  Needlework. An emblem or pattern worked in embroidery or other stitching on fabric, clothing, etc.; (also) any small picture used as a decorative device on textiles. ΘΚΠ the world > textiles and clothing > clothing > parts of clothing > 			[noun]		 > trimmings or ornamentation > other jace1399 loopa1475 shakers1506 aglet1530 nerve1531 pipe1533 targeting1563 pinion1583 pinioning1597 tzitzit1618 loop-lace1632 button1671 tip1681 fal-lal1703 falbala1705 furbelow1706 jewelling1718 weeper1724 pompom1748 chiffons1765 foliage-trimming1818 mancheron1822 piping1825 manchette1835 patte1835 streamer1838 waterfall1841 paillette1843 brandenburgs1873 motif1882 patch1884 smocking1888 jockey1896 strapping1898 steel1899 sparklet1902 slotting1923 1882    S. F. A. Caulfeild  & B. C. Saward Dict. Needlework 351/1  				Motifs. A French term, used to distinguish the pattern of a piece of Embroidery from the groundwork or material. 1911    E. Ferber Buttered Side Down 119  				There's one [blouse] you positively must see. Hand-embroidered, Irish motifs, and eyeleted from soup to nuts, and only eight-fifty. 1976    D. Storey Saville 		(1978)	  iv. xiv. 335  				On the front of her beret was the single stork motif of Bletchley's school. 1988    Gender & Society 2 43  				The male variant snaps from left to right, has a pointed collar and a football motif, [etc.]. 1990    Fashion Forecast Internat. Sept. 124/1  				Multicolour motifs on cotton jersey make Naf-Naf's bra and boxer set. 1992    M. Margetts Classic Crafts 15/1  				Textile makers initially painted their designs onto fabric, then introduced small printing blocks which made it possible to repeat certain motifs more quickly.  c.  Lacemaking. An individual element of the design of lace (such as a flower or leaf), esp. one made separately and subsequently joined to the ground or sewn on a garment; = sprig n.2 3d. Also (in extended use): any small fabric shape used as an appliqué. ΘΚΠ the world > textiles and clothing > textiles > textile fabric or an article of textile fabric > textile fabric > textile fabric manufactured in specific way > 			[noun]		 > consisting of loops or looped stitches > lace > pillow or bobbin > detached piece of sprig1811 motif1888 1888    A. S. Cole tr.  E. Lefébure Embroidery & Lace  ii. iii. 289  				These [scrolls] lacked the rich reliefs which abounded in the Venetian needlepoint designs of similar motifs. 1897    Westm. Gaz. 26 Aug. 3/2  				Motifs, braces, epaulettes,..may be created from bold patterned guipure lace. 1906    Times 4 May 10/2  				The skirt was bordered..with large jetted lace motifs. 1907    L. A. Tebbs Art of Bobbin Lace 37  				These dainty little motifs form pretty ornaments for hats, blouses, etc., or..make a handsome border for collars. 1920    Amer. Woman Aug. 21/1  				The motifs, four in number, are connected by lines of cording. 1979    E. Luxton Technique Honiton Lace 107  				Four-sepal raised poppy..is worked similarly to the previous motif. 1983    P. Earnshaw Bobbin & Needle Laces iii. 31  				These laces are still continuous since, in each piece, ground and motifs are made from the same threads... Another means of acceleration is to make the design motifs self-contained so that..all the separate motifs have to be joined by a ground before a lace is created.  2.  Music. A short, usually recurrent, melodic or rhythmic unit; = figure n. 24. Also: a leitmotif. Occasionally: = subject n. 16   (now rare). Cf. motive n. 8, motivo n. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > the arts > music > piece of music > section of piece of music > 			[noun]		 > theme > motive motivo1786 motif1849 motive1861 1849    Godey's Lady's Bk. Oct. 295  				La Fete Nuptiale; brilliant variations on the motif ‘Ah! would that happy day were near’, from Linda di Chamounix. Any piece founded on this beautiful air must be beautiful, and the composer has done himself and his subject justice. 1880    G. Grove Dict. Music II. 377/1  				Motif (Germ. Motiv), a word..in process of naturalization into English, and which has no less than three distinct meanings..1st, the German word originally means what we call ‘figure’, that is, a short group of notes..; 2nd, it is used as a synonym for Subject..; 3rd, as equivalent to, and an abbreviation of, Leit-Motiv. 1882    A. Edwardes Ballroom Repent. I. 189  				I feel original. I have got hold of a motif! Oh, if we had..a sheet of scored paper! a1902    F. Norris Pit 		(1903)	 vii. 250  				These long, slow rhythms, tortured, languishing, really dying. It reminds one of ‘Phèdre’..; and Wagner has the same. You find it again in Isolde's motif continually. 1916    J. G. Fletcher Goblins & Pagodas Pref. p. xv  				The new subject-matter of Wagner's music-dramas, of an immeasurably higher order than the usual libretto, created a new form of music, based on motifs, not melodies. 1978    Gramophone Aug. 329/1  				With steady tempi, the crispest possible articulation (the anapaestic motif of the Scherzo never so cleanly attacked).., it stands among the most direct..readings of the Symphony yet recorded. 1986    Music Teacher May 39/3  				The Brahmsian characteristics are so clear, the motifs, the harmonic shifts.  3.   a.  Literary Criticism. A particular subject for imaginative treatment, esp. an incident, situation, ethical problem, etc., embodying a central idea that informs a work; a recurrent theme, subject, or image. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > the arts > literature > prose > narrative or story > fiction > 			[noun]		 > plot > motif motif1857 archetype1957 1857    C. Kingsley Two Years Ago I. vi. 161  				I owe you a debt, sir, for having furnished me with one of the most striking ‘motifs’ I ever had. 1877    Internat. Rev. Jan. 73  				Having endeavored to discover the motif and purpose of George Eliot's work. 1897    ‘E. Lyall’ E. C. Gaskell in  Women Novelists 125  				The difficult subject which forms the motif of ‘Ruth’. 1902    W. W. Lawrence in  Jrnl. Germanic Philol. 4 476  				Repetition of motifs and consequent disturbance of logical arrangement is characteristic of Anglo-Saxon poetry. 1971    Eng. Stud. 52 501  				In addition to the motif of longing, the themes of former happiness and of present estrangement from friends also unify the poem. 1980    M. Esslin Theatre of Absurd 		(ed. 3)	 v. 235  				The room, which is the centre and chief poetic image of the play, is one of the recurring motifs of Pinter's work.  b.  spec. (chiefly Cultural Anthropology) with reference to folklore and folk tales. ΚΠ 1884    A. Lang in  R.M. Dorson Peasant Customs 		(1968)	 I. 312  				Turning from the Samoyeds and the Epirotes to Africa, we find the motif (escape of brother and sister) in a Kaffir tale. 1941    G. G. Scholem Major Trends in Jewish Mysticism ii. 67  				Some of the oldest mythical motifs are to be found..in an extremely interesting..text. 1962    W. H. Auden Dyer's Hand 		(1963)	 212  				There is only one fairy-tale motif, to my knowledge, that contains an element of inner conflict. 1982    Callaloo No. 16. 158  				[She] arranges them according to what she considers each tale's dominant motif.  4.  gen. A distinctive, significant, or salient theme or idea; a recurrent or prevalent characteristic. ΘΚΠ the mind > mental capacity > perception or cognition > faculty of ideation > topic, subject-matter > 			[noun]		 > leading theme burden1649 keynote1763 motif1952 1952    P. Tillich Courage to Be v. 123  				Another motif of recent Existentialism anticipated by nomination is the escape into authority. 1975    Aviation Week 10 Nov. 34/2  				A world-turned-upside-down motif characterizes a growing list of changing facts of life in commercial air transport. 1991    A. Borrowdale Distorted Images iv. 38  				James Nelson suggests that fear of failure is a strong motif in men's lives, and is connected with performance anxiety over sexual intercourse. 2000    C. Tudge Variety of Life  ii. ix. 269  				Shrimpishness is a primitive and common crustacean motif, recurring in many orders.  5.  Molecular Biology. In a nucleic acid or protein molecule: a distinctive ordered region of the three-dimensional structure, or a specific, often conserved sequence of residues; esp. one that is associated with a particular function, such as formation of the DNA binding site of a transcription factor. ΚΠ 1973    Currents in Mod. Biol. 5 97/1  				Crystals of tRNA are presently being analysed by X-ray diffraction. If such a structural motif exists, its presence will become clear. 1979    Science 27 Apr. 376/1  				This sturctural motif is not related to the clefted nature of kinases. 1981    Nature 26 Feb. 772/1  				Each domain comprises a sandwich of two four-stranded sheets, each sheet being made from three strands of one ‘Greek key’ motif and one strand from another. 1988    Nature 6 Oct. 519/2  				In this 3′ region, we note the presence of five ATTTA motifs that could influence the stability of messenger RNA. 1993    Sci. Amer. Feb. 32/2  				Of course, zinc fingers are not the only structures transcription factors exploit for interacting with DNA. Other important examples bear such names as helix-turn-helix motifs..homeodomains and leucine zippers. 2001    Structure 9 73  				Each structural unit for binding cAMP contains the highly conserved phosphate binding cassette that can be considered the ‘signature’ motif of cAMP binding domains.  II.  Senses influenced by motive n. I.  6.  A motivating, dominant, or regulating idea, esp. a recurrent or pervasive one. Frequently in  profit motif (cf. profit motive n. at profit n. Compounds 1b).In later use frequently overlapping with sense  4   (see, e.g., quots. 1948, a1961). ΚΠ 1874    J. O. Dykes Relations Kingdom to World 163  				The very motif to such false teaching is a desire to broaden somewhat the excessive straitness of the gospel path to life. 1887    G. T. Ladd Elem. Physiol. Psychol. 463  				The motifs or data which the mind would have for constructing such a surface must be found in the series of sensations of light and color. 1932    Internat. Jrnl. Ethics 42 118  				The growth of the private profit motif in any professional man marks in him the recession of the professional spirit. 1948    Sociometry 11 220  				Other highly chosen sentiments include ‘serving the community’, ‘promoting pleasure for others’, ‘self-sacrifice’, and ‘duty’, all of which in operation together form a ‘service to others’ motif. a1961    in  Webster's 3rd New Internat. Dict. Eng. Lang. 		(1961)	 (at cited word)  				The motif of the new measure is reformation. Spectator. 1993    Los Angeles Times 		(Nexis)	 15 Apr.  c1/2  				The profit motif is television. Television controls the purse strings. Compounds C1.   General attributive (chiefly in sense  3).   motif-classification  n. ΚΠ 1966    K. Luomala in  M. Jacobs Anthropol. looks at Myth 164  				Kirtley's Motif-Index..follows Stith Thompson's system for motif-classification.   motif framework  n. ΚΠ 1971    R. L. Welsch tr.  K. Krohn Folklore Methodol. iii. 31  				The fact that it occurs more or less incidentally in other complexes is due to the influence of the motif framework.   motif research  n. ΚΠ 1938    P. S. Watson tr.  A. T. S. Nygren Agape & Eros Pt. 2 I. 23  				The answer can only be supplied by motif-research, that is, by an enquiry which detects the motif behind the formed expression. 1972    W. H. Capps 		(title)	  				Motif-research as a comparative technique in theological systems analyses. 1988    Speculum 63 474  				An exercise in motif research.   motif-work  n. ΚΠ 1948    L. Spitzer Linguistics & Lit. Hist. v. 193  				This..movement is incarnated in..the rhythm—as in the verbal motif-work.  C2.     motif index  n. chiefly Cultural Anthropology an index of standard motifs, esp. those found in folk tales. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > the arts > literature > literary and textual criticism > textual criticism > version of text > 			[noun]		 > motif-index motif index1932 1932    S. Thompson in  Indiana Univ. Stud. No. 96 		(heading)	  				Motif-index of folk literature. 1958    T. P. Coffin Analyt. Index to Jrnl. Amer. Folklore 239  				It was deemed advisable not to attempt a complete Thompson-style motif-index of the Journal. 1973    A. Dundes Mother Wit 114  				These tools include various tale type indices and motif indices... By using tale type and motif indices, Dorson is able to demonstrate the European provenience of the greater portion of the tales. 1992    Harvard Jrnl. Asiatic Stud. 52 128  				These statistics are based on the motif index of Dunhuang murals. Derivatives  moˈtif-less adj. ΚΠ 1970    Daily Tel. 27 June 7  				This work, while not..unmotivated, is entirely motif-less—introductory clinking of pebbles, toneless blowing into instruments built for lusher uses.   moˈtif-like adj. ΚΠ 1964    Eng. Stud. 44 446  				Two terms which characterize Christina's..reputation through their motif-like occurrence, caprice and banality, are a source of insight and confusion. 1991    Proc. National Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 88 11349/2  				GTP-binding motif-like sequences. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2002; most recently modified version published online March 2022). < | 
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