释义 |
[ es-thet-i-kuhl or, especially British, ees- ] / ɛsˈθɛt ɪ kəl or, especially British, is- /
adjectiveof or relating to aesthetics. Origin of aestheticalFirst recorded in 1790–1800; see origin at aesthetic, -al1 OTHER WORDS FROM aestheticalnon·aes·thet·i·cal, adjectivenon·aes·thet·i·cal·ly, adverbsu·per·aes·thet·i·cal, adjectivesu·per·aes·thet·i·cal·ly, adverbWords nearby aestheticalaesthesiometer, aesthesiometry, aesthesiophysiology, aesthete, aesthetic, aesthetical, aesthetically, aesthetic distance, aesthetician, aestheticism, aestheticize Dictionary.com UnabridgedBased on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2020 Example sentences from the Web for aestheticalAs the gallery puts it, Mercier's works "imply that function is part of an aesthetical proposition." This Bench Recycles Bad Carpet as Good Art|Blake Gopnik|June 27, 2013|DAILY BEAST In the latter the chief point is a certain use of the artistic object, by which condition the aesthetical Ideas are limited. Kant's Critique of Judgement|Immanuel Kant The purposiveness is here obviously objective and intellectual, not merely subjective and aesthetical. Kant's Critique of Judgement|Immanuel Kant This last always happens in an aesthetical judgement upon anything so far as it gratifies or grieves us. Kant's Critique of Judgement|Immanuel Kant
Munich, on the Isar, is every day drifting into the beautiful, not to say aesthetical. Some Cities and San Francisco and Resurgam|Hubert Howe Bancroft Aesthetical judgements can be divided just like theoretical (logical) judgements into empirical and pure. Kant's Critique of Judgement|Immanuel Kant
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