释义 |
nuancenu‧ance /ˈnjuːɑːns $ ˈnuː-/ noun [countable] nuanceOrigin: 1700-1800 French, Old French nuer ‘to make shades of color’, from nue ‘cloud’ - There are layers of nuance and humor in her writing.
- Beauty was communication, each mote of light shaded with one nuance of meaning and each meaning had a colour.
- His voice is measured, but I invent my own tones, the nuances of criticism.
- In a developing country, however, a number of additional nuances may exacerbate these issues.
- Television has no time for nuance or subtlety.
- The vivisystems I examine in this book are nearly bottomless complications, vast in range, and gigantic in nuance.
- They now rely less on naff novelties and more on structure and nuance, while still retaining an Alec Gilroy-sense of showbiz.
- We shall see how much or how little of local nuances it succeeded in conveying to the top authorities.
- Yet the rich nuances of the voice clearly convey the message none the less.
► subtle nuances subtle nuances of meaning ADJECTIVE► subtle· But there are more subtle nuances in that story.· These additional flavor layers offer greater opportunities to marry the dish with the subtle nuances of a fine Cabernet Sauvignon or Merlot.· Scientists now understand the subtle nuances of its genetic machinery. VERB► understand· As such they have to be understood with nuances of influence and control often benign but sometimes narrow in focus.· Scientists now understand the subtle nuances of its genetic machinery.· Veronica may not have immediately understood the nuances of Nicklaus's final comment to Peter, but she witnessed it. a very slight, hardly noticeable difference in manner, colour, meaning etc → subtlety: He was aware of every nuance in her voice.nuance of the painting’s delicate nuances of color, tone, and texture subtle nuances of meaning—nuanced adjective: a skilful and nuanced performance |