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单词 classically
释义

Definition of classically in English:

classically

adverb ˈklasɪk(ə)liˈklæsɪkli
  • 1In a way that relates to ancient Greek or Latin literature, art, or culture.

    the nineteenth-century classically educated reader
    the classically austere traditions of the Roman republic
    Example sentencesExamples
    • All were children of the classically oriented Renaissance.
    • Not all of these poets had poetic values as classically Horatian as Ryan's "temperance and sobriety of invention."
    • The classically inspired garden is a perfect spot for reading, relaxing, posing, or even planning a murder.
    • These were women who were classically educated through carefully selected literature and who would form the basis of a stable family life.
    • She maintains that a classically trained grammarian would in fact not interpret it that way.
    • The problem of any classically educated writer's falling in love with Greece was how to reconcile the provincial reality with the idealized images.
    • In the classically austere traditions of the republic, its gladiators found the ideals to keep their enthusiasm on the high plane of the great historical tragedy.
    • In 1530, the physician and poet Girolamo Fracastoro christened the disease in his classically inspired poem "Syphilis."
    • According to a traditional view of knowledge classically descending from Aristotle, wonder is a "cognitive emotion" endowed with a positive role.
    • Fielding, aristocratic and classically educated, was worldly, tolerant, self-assured, and witty.
    1. 1.1 (with reference to art or architecture) in a way that resembles or is influenced by ancient Greek or Roman forms or principles.
      fine architecture and beautiful, classically designed buildings
      Example sentencesExamples
      • When the museum opened in 1961, in a classically inspired pavilion, Carter's collection became the foundation of a public enterprise.
      • It features wide piazzas, perfectly proportioned civic buildings, and classically inspired columns and arches.
      • After 1570, another leading architect modernized the house and added classically inspired fronts to the entrance and to the grand entrance to the hall.
      • The cemetery is a classically designed rectangle bisected with both oval and diagonal pathways.
      • The surreal gardens of Cythera contain all manner of outlandish, classically conceived decorative structures and fountains.
      • The general adoption of the classically influenced "Beaux-Arts model" for teaching architecture in the United States refined the study of classical proportion.
      • Classically inspired architecture in all its variations seemed too formal for commercial buildings.
      • The phallus reappears in "Racional," a classically sculpted male torso.
      • His interiors combine domes, columned screens, and apses with classically derived surface patterns in delicate colors.
      • Note the classically proportioned gatehouse and storied porch added between 1586 and 1600.
  • 2To an exemplary standard within a traditional and long-established form or style.

    a classically trained British stage actor
    a truly terrific evening of classically inspired dance
    Example sentencesExamples
    • He represents Danish, a classically trained painter born in Ukraine.
    • It needs a classically sensed score to build the tension and give greater sense to the overwhelming energy.
    • It seemed suitable for a lovely 32-year-old classically trained cellist.
    • He performs the work here with Glennie, a more classically oriented percussionist.
    • Much of the show's success is attributable the classically trained cast.
    • More of an improviser than a classically trained cook, he still puts hot sauce on everything.
    • Emotional expression isn't sacrificed to the demands of classically beautiful tone.
    • The storytelling builds to an almighty crescendo between two classically trained craftsmen.
    • This is a real voice, classically trained and responsive to most everything its owner asks it to do.
    • This subtle fragrance is classically feminine with a modern approach.
    1. 2.1 In a way that relates to the first significant period of an area of study.
      so much of Marxist economics was classically oriented
      Iberian horses have been classically divided into two native groups
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Interruption of oxygen supply to the fetus was classically considered to be the main causal factor explaining later cerebral palsy.
      • Dispensed medications are classically classified into three categories.
      • The chef explains that the dishes will be classically interpreted, but will be a touch more progressive.
      • This rare syndrome was classically diagnosed by a triad of findings.
      • Nonhereditary DNA mutations are not classically understood as representing the individual's genotype.
    2. 2.2 In a way that is very typical of its kind.
      a classically styled cyberpunk film
      Example sentencesExamples
      • The actor shows up with one of his classically odd performances.
      • But that does not diminish its status as classically Bergmanesque.
      • He tries to write off both performances with his classically backhanded style.
      • As I pointed out, in classically long-winded form, the argument is about as clever as a four-year-old's protest.
      • It is easy to assume that the director's reticent, classically self-effacing style is merely decorative, dry, or inert.
      • It was a classically American Fourth of July.
      • In fact, he gets a classically Sonnenfeld story about trying to get the trainer to teach the dog to talk.
      • The first thing to note is that, classically, drunkenness involves a privileged relation to truth.
      • He is already burying the actor and his career in a classically Friedmanesque act of media myopia.
      • It's a crackerjack spy thriller with classically Hitchcockian characters and situations.
  • 3Physics
    According to or in accordance with concepts and theories which preceded the theories of relativity and quantum mechanics.

    we can describe light classically in terms of an electromagnetic wave
    wormholes may be unstable, both classically or quantum mechanically
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Large objects can behave classically, while smaller objects behave quantum mechanically.
    • Classically, a particle trapped in a one-dimensional infinite potential well of length L would have an equal probability of being detected anywhere in the well.
    • The evolution of a classically chaotic Hamiltonian system is characterized by a computational complexity that increases exponentially with time elapsed.
    • The author examines solvability in quantum mechanics and classically superfluous invariants.
    • We can say that the particle must be moving around in the classically allowed region.
 
 

Definition of classically in US English:

classically

adverbˈklæsɪkliˈklasiklē
  • 1In a way that relates to ancient Greek or Latin literature, art, or culture.

    the nineteenth-century classically educated reader
    the classically austere traditions of the Roman republic
    Example sentencesExamples
    • The problem of any classically educated writer's falling in love with Greece was how to reconcile the provincial reality with the idealized images.
    • All were children of the classically oriented Renaissance.
    • She maintains that a classically trained grammarian would in fact not interpret it that way.
    • In 1530, the physician and poet Girolamo Fracastoro christened the disease in his classically inspired poem "Syphilis."
    • In the classically austere traditions of the republic, its gladiators found the ideals to keep their enthusiasm on the high plane of the great historical tragedy.
    • These were women who were classically educated through carefully selected literature and who would form the basis of a stable family life.
    • The classically inspired garden is a perfect spot for reading, relaxing, posing, or even planning a murder.
    • Not all of these poets had poetic values as classically Horatian as Ryan's "temperance and sobriety of invention."
    • Fielding, aristocratic and classically educated, was worldly, tolerant, self-assured, and witty.
    • According to a traditional view of knowledge classically descending from Aristotle, wonder is a "cognitive emotion" endowed with a positive role.
    1. 1.1 (with reference to art or architecture) in a way that resembles or is influenced by ancient Greek or Roman forms or principles.
      fine architecture and beautiful, classically designed buildings
      Example sentencesExamples
      • It features wide piazzas, perfectly proportioned civic buildings, and classically inspired columns and arches.
      • Note the classically proportioned gatehouse and storied porch added between 1586 and 1600.
      • After 1570, another leading architect modernized the house and added classically inspired fronts to the entrance and to the grand entrance to the hall.
      • The phallus reappears in "Racional," a classically sculpted male torso.
      • His interiors combine domes, columned screens, and apses with classically derived surface patterns in delicate colors.
      • Classically inspired architecture in all its variations seemed too formal for commercial buildings.
      • The cemetery is a classically designed rectangle bisected with both oval and diagonal pathways.
      • The general adoption of the classically influenced "Beaux-Arts model" for teaching architecture in the United States refined the study of classical proportion.
      • The surreal gardens of Cythera contain all manner of outlandish, classically conceived decorative structures and fountains.
      • When the museum opened in 1961, in a classically inspired pavilion, Carter's collection became the foundation of a public enterprise.
  • 2To an exemplary standard within a traditional and long-established form or style.

    a classically trained British stage actor
    a truly terrific evening of classically inspired dance
    Example sentencesExamples
    • He represents Danish, a classically trained painter born in Ukraine.
    • The storytelling builds to an almighty crescendo between two classically trained craftsmen.
    • He performs the work here with Glennie, a more classically oriented percussionist.
    • Emotional expression isn't sacrificed to the demands of classically beautiful tone.
    • It seemed suitable for a lovely 32-year-old classically trained cellist.
    • Much of the show's success is attributable the classically trained cast.
    • It needs a classically sensed score to build the tension and give greater sense to the overwhelming energy.
    • This is a real voice, classically trained and responsive to most everything its owner asks it to do.
    • More of an improviser than a classically trained cook, he still puts hot sauce on everything.
    • This subtle fragrance is classically feminine with a modern approach.
    1. 2.1 In a way that relates to the first significant period of an area of study.
      so much of Marxist economics was classically oriented
      Iberian horses have been classically divided into two native groups
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Interruption of oxygen supply to the fetus was classically considered to be the main causal factor explaining later cerebral palsy.
      • The chef explains that the dishes will be classically interpreted, but will be a touch more progressive.
      • Dispensed medications are classically classified into three categories.
      • This rare syndrome was classically diagnosed by a triad of findings.
      • Nonhereditary DNA mutations are not classically understood as representing the individual's genotype.
    2. 2.2 In a way that is very typical of its kind.
      a classically styled cyberpunk film
      Example sentencesExamples
      • The first thing to note is that, classically, drunkenness involves a privileged relation to truth.
      • In fact, he gets a classically Sonnenfeld story about trying to get the trainer to teach the dog to talk.
      • He tries to write off both performances with his classically backhanded style.
      • As I pointed out, in classically long-winded form, the argument is about as clever as a four-year-old's protest.
      • It was a classically American Fourth of July.
      • It is easy to assume that the director's reticent, classically self-effacing style is merely decorative, dry, or inert.
      • But that does not diminish its status as classically Bergmanesque.
      • He is already burying the actor and his career in a classically Friedmanesque act of media myopia.
      • The actor shows up with one of his classically odd performances.
      • It's a crackerjack spy thriller with classically Hitchcockian characters and situations.
  • 3Physics
    According to or in accordance with concepts and theories which preceded the theories of relativity and quantum mechanics.

    we can describe light classically in terms of an electromagnetic wave
    wormholes may be unstable, both classically or quantum mechanically
    Example sentencesExamples
    • The author examines solvability in quantum mechanics and classically superfluous invariants.
    • The evolution of a classically chaotic Hamiltonian system is characterized by a computational complexity that increases exponentially with time elapsed.
    • Classically, a particle trapped in a one-dimensional infinite potential well of length L would have an equal probability of being detected anywhere in the well.
    • Large objects can behave classically, while smaller objects behave quantum mechanically.
    • We can say that the particle must be moving around in the classically allowed region.
 
 
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更新时间:2024/12/23 7:50:43