请输入您要查询的英文单词:

 

单词 new wave
释义

New Waven.adj.

Brit. /ˌnjuː ˈweɪv/, U.S. /ˈn(j)u ˈweɪv/
Forms: also with lower-case initials.
Origin: Formed within English, by compounding. Etymons: new adj., wave n.
Etymology: < new adj. + wave n. In sense A. 2 after French nouvelle vague nouvelle vague n.
A. n.
1. gen. Frequently with the. A new movement or trend, esp. in the arts.
ΘΚΠ
the world > time > relative time > the present (time) > [noun] > modernity > new movement or trend
nouvelle vague1959
New Wave1960
1960 News Chron. 19 July 6/8 A ‘new wave’ is emerging here [i.e. in Spain], too, with an up-to-date philosophy.
1961 Sunday Times 12 Feb. 11/8 Blanchflower is the very crest of the New Wave among professional footballers.
1988 L. Ellmann Sweet Desserts 96 We need an article on the New Wave, all these fat-assed East Village guys that're taking over the art market.
1991 New Republic 9 Sept. 38/1 The New Wave in Israeli fiction..had been embarked on an aggressive program of demythologizing.
2.
a. With the. A movement in French filmmaking from the late 1950s to early 1960s, characterized by an emphasis on individual directorial style, innovative editing and filming techniques, and a preference for existentialist themes; also applied to similar movements in other countries. Cf. auteur n. and adj. Now historical.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > literature > literary world > [noun] > literary movements or theories
romanticism1821
romantism1828
naturalism1845
realism1856
sensationism1862
symbolism1866
classicisma1878
eroticism1881
impressionism1883
sensitivism1891
verism1892
neoclassicism1893
veritism1894
social realism1898
neo-realism1908
futurism1909
Félibrism1911
postmodernism1914
vorticism1914
Dada1918
Dadaism1918
Scythism1921
Scythianism1923
Russian Formalism1925
surrealism1927
Neue Sachlichkeit1929
populism1930
Sachlichkeit1930
dirty realism1931
ultraism1932
thingism1935
formalism1943
organicism1945
lettrism1946
New Wave1960
socialist realism1967
catastrophism1969
pointillism1972
po-mo1986
society > leisure > the arts > performance arts > cinematography > [noun] > films or the cinema > movements or genres
neo-realism1908
screwballism1942
Free Cinema1956
nouvelle vague1959
New Wave1960
cinéma vérité1961
Cinema Novo1963
romcom1963
ciné verité1965
teensploitation1983
1960 Guardian 15 Oct. 5/2 The Italian neo-realists..and..the Frenchmen of the ‘New Wave’ have all been pursuing the same course.
1975 Times Lit. Suppl. 21 Nov. 1374/2 The defining characteristic of the New Wave, and its ambiguous legacy to all films made since 1958–61, was selfconsciousness... The New Wave brought the film director to the public's immediate attention as a potential cultural hero.
1997 Times Lit. Suppl. 29 Aug. 19/2 The critics of the New Wave tended to lump him with Clouzot and Autant-Lara, as examples of what was wrong with French post-war cinema.
b. With the. A loose movement in science fiction writing from the mid-1960s to mid-1970s, characterized by an experimental approach to narrative structures and language and an emphasis on nuanced social, moral, or psychological conflict rather than on technological concerns. Now historical.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > literature > literary world > [noun] > specific schools of writers
Cockney school1817
sensitivism1891
Félibrige1902
Bloomsbury1910
Squirearchy1930
niggerati1932
New Wave1968
Oulipo1975
1961 Analog Sci. Fact & Fiction Nov. 167/1 It's a moot question whether Carnell discovered the ‘big names’ of British science fiction—Wyndham, Clarke, Russell, Christopher—or whether they discovered him. Whatever the answer, there is no question at all about the ‘new wave’: Tubb, Aldiss, and to get to my point, Kenneth Bulmer and John Brunner.]
1968 B. W. Aldiss in J. Merril Eng. Swings SF 279 Really, I'm no part of the new wave (don't even like their stories madly).
1988 R. A. Luproff New Wave in J. Gunn New Encycl. Sci. Fiction 328 George Orwell's Nineteen Eighty-Four (1949) and Alfred Bester's The Demolished Man (1953) may be seen as forerunners of the New Wave.
1994 Asimov's Sci. Fiction July 4/2 The ambitious work of the writers who were considered to be part of the New Wave was swiftly going out of print.
c. A style of rock music that emerged in the late 1970s, originally associated with punk rock but typically less aggressive in performance and musically more melodic and experimental, often characterized by spare guitar lines and an edgy vocal delivery.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > music > type of music > pop music > [noun] > rock > types of
jazz-rock1915
rockabilly1956
rockaboogie1956
hard rock1959
folk-rock1963
soft rock1965
surf rock1965
acid rock1966
raga rock1966
progressive rock1968
Christian rock1969
cock rock1970
punk1970
punk rock1970
space rock1970
swamp rock1970
techno-rock1971
glitter rock1972
grunge1973
glam-rock1974
pub rock1974
alternative rock1975
dinosaur rock1975
prog rock1976
AOR1977
New Wave1977
pomp rock1978
prog1978
anarcho-punk1979
stadium rock1979
oi1981
alt-rock1982
noise1982
noise-rock1982
trash1983
mosh1985
emo-core1986
Goth1986
rawk1987
emo1988
grindcore1989
darkwave1990
queercore1991
lo-fi1993
dadrock1994
nu metal1995
1977 Time Out 17 June 9/2 If New Wave means anything at all as a description, it means, says Petty, ‘young bands playing again. For a long time the young bands were just joining the old bands.’
1979 N.Y. Times 13 Aug. c16/3 Punk soon turned to new wave, which especially in the United States meant a more deliberately clever, even arty approach to rock minimalism.
2000 M. Albo Hornito 183 Even though Tammy and I show promise as future perfect punkers, we..crave bouncier music that has melodies—new Wave.
B. adj.
Frequently hyphenated. Of, relating to, or characteristic of the New Wave (in various senses); making use of or characterized by new methods or innovations.
ΘΚΠ
the world > time > relative time > the present (time) > [adjective] > modern
modern1585
new-schoolish1844
New World1847
latter day1850
contemporary1859
unantiquated1859
todayish1864
contemporaneous1871
modernistic1878
presentist1878
up to date1888
down to date1893
up-with-the-times1893
de nos jours1909
up to the minute1909
chromium-plate1924
chromium-plated1924
contempo1944
now1955
New Wave1960
nouveau1974
1960 News Chron. 6 Aug. 6/7 Cy Grant will sing ‘Carnival’ from the French new-wave movie.
1967 Economist 18 Mar. 1008/2 The new-wave nationalists have not bothered to think out what sort of nationalism they want.
1972 Newsweek 10 Jan. 22/1 As New York's new-wave mayor in 1966, he had portrayed himself as a reform insurgent battling the city's ‘power brokers’.
1976 Listener 23 Dec. 847/2 The Pistols are..the best known of the ‘new-wave’, or ‘punk-rock’ groups.
1984 Callaloo Autumn 5 Samuel Delany has made a lasting contribution to the ‘New Wave’ fringe of science fiction.
1998 Food & Trav. Apr. 27/1 The meat from these animals [sc. deer]..is much favoured by new-wave cooks.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, September 2003; most recently modified version published online March 2022).
<
n.adj.1960
随便看

 

英语词典包含1132095条英英释义在线翻译词条,基本涵盖了全部常用单词的英英翻译及用法,是英语学习的有利工具。

 

Copyright © 2004-2022 Newdu.com All Rights Reserved
更新时间:2024/9/21 8:07:14