释义 |
Definition of televisual in English: televisualadjective tɛlɪˈvɪʒʊ(ə)ltɛlɪˈvɪzjʊ(ə)lˌtɛləˈvɪʒuəl Relating to or suitable for television. the world of televisual images Example sentencesExamples - There are people with televisual charisma; he's one.
- AS A child of the televisual age, it's remarkable that so many of my sporting memories are encapsulated by still images rather than moving footage.
- Despite this, there is evidence of a nascent televisual language.
- Though shot in widescreen, the feel of the piece is otherwise televisual.
- Similarly, she seems to have become accustomed to seeing herself through the eyes of televisual media and the products it promotes.
- Like Formula One, golf is a sport where you get a better view of what is going on from watching it on the television and that televisual experience is fast evolving.
- Gymnastics is, like figure skating, a highly televisual sport where appeals are commonplace and rumours abound about the judging, and it is now under pressure to reform.
- This reporter predicts it to be a most intriguing televisual experience, involving changing coloured lights and an exciting timpanic musical accompaniment.
- One difference between cinematic and televisual depictions of disaster involves the different visual logics of the two media.
- We should appreciate that our desires to shield our aesthetic experiences against criticism and the fragility of time subtend our televisual choices.
- The copious amount of philosophical work on the subject of comedy offers valuable and suggestive resources to the student of film and televisual comedy.
- But sadly, no televisual images of this are available.
- The drama uses conventions of televisual reality, grounding the drama in the real world, making it more accessible for the viewer and more easily appropriated by them.
- This is counter to mainstream cinema viewing but in keeping with soap opera and many televisual texts.
- Literacy in televisual grief was being formed through the event.
- Soap opera is the descendant of the melodramatic in televisual form.
- It is worth considering how televisual programming makes activity and interactivity a part of its appeal to the viewer.
- His acute sense of the symbolic and the televisual has created images of success so powerful that they overwhelm doubts about his logic.
- ‘We have a television culture but that doesn't mean we have to have televisual simplicities in our politics’.
- Punters who like to create and edit their own televisual treats can do so using bundled video capture and DVD mastering software.
Derivatives adverb To the extent that the majority of Americans receive their information televisually, why make posters at all? Example sentencesExamples - I think that the same process is involved in the construction of any event televisually.
- For the first time BBC Children in Need was televisually interactive, allowing millions of television viewers with digital TV access to donate to the charity from the comfort of their armchair.
- A day's filming and editing in Cardiff means I'm able to post up a new videoblog - the most televisually complex one so far.
Definition of televisual in US English: televisualadjectiveˌtɛləˈvɪʒuəlˌteləˈviZHo͞oəl Relating to or suitable for television. the world of televisual images Example sentencesExamples - ‘We have a television culture but that doesn't mean we have to have televisual simplicities in our politics’.
- Punters who like to create and edit their own televisual treats can do so using bundled video capture and DVD mastering software.
- The copious amount of philosophical work on the subject of comedy offers valuable and suggestive resources to the student of film and televisual comedy.
- Similarly, she seems to have become accustomed to seeing herself through the eyes of televisual media and the products it promotes.
- Gymnastics is, like figure skating, a highly televisual sport where appeals are commonplace and rumours abound about the judging, and it is now under pressure to reform.
- There are people with televisual charisma; he's one.
- But sadly, no televisual images of this are available.
- The drama uses conventions of televisual reality, grounding the drama in the real world, making it more accessible for the viewer and more easily appropriated by them.
- Despite this, there is evidence of a nascent televisual language.
- We should appreciate that our desires to shield our aesthetic experiences against criticism and the fragility of time subtend our televisual choices.
- One difference between cinematic and televisual depictions of disaster involves the different visual logics of the two media.
- This is counter to mainstream cinema viewing but in keeping with soap opera and many televisual texts.
- Soap opera is the descendant of the melodramatic in televisual form.
- Though shot in widescreen, the feel of the piece is otherwise televisual.
- AS A child of the televisual age, it's remarkable that so many of my sporting memories are encapsulated by still images rather than moving footage.
- Like Formula One, golf is a sport where you get a better view of what is going on from watching it on the television and that televisual experience is fast evolving.
- This reporter predicts it to be a most intriguing televisual experience, involving changing coloured lights and an exciting timpanic musical accompaniment.
- It is worth considering how televisual programming makes activity and interactivity a part of its appeal to the viewer.
- His acute sense of the symbolic and the televisual has created images of success so powerful that they overwhelm doubts about his logic.
- Literacy in televisual grief was being formed through the event.
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