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单词 dada
释义

dada1

noun ˈdɑːdɑːˈdɑdɑ
informal
  • One's father.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • The truth is that my dada is jealous of my fiancé because I'm his only girl and we were so close.
    • I love my dada and completely adore his eccentric ways.
    • Young William loved these outings, so proud to be seen with his Dada.
    • There is no more wonderful gift in my life than my daughter, who is upstairs getting tucked into bed by her Dada as I write this.
    • My dada said that my mom left us too for doing groceries, when we were in bed, but my mom denied that.

Origin

Late 17th century: perhaps imitative of a young child's first syllables (see dad).

dada2

noun ˈdɑːdɑːˈdɑdɑ
Indian
  • 1An older brother or male cousin.

    Dada went to see off his father-in-law
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Driving through jungle roads for three hours, we reached a village to find the remnants of a fire started by the dadas.
    • Born in Delhi to Punjabi parents who were refugees of the partition from Lahore, he has heard stories from his dadas.
    • The Hindi play directed at the dadas of the city sent the crowd into peals of laughter.
    • I had a meeting with about 90 dadas to discuss the future of their youth.
    • My dada is old, so all he and his friends talk about is diseases.
    1. 1.1 A respectful form of address for an older male.
      Ram dada is my cousin's friend
      Example sentencesExamples
      • After Channu dada's request, the Sanghatana filed a complaint with the collector in September 2002, demanding the release of his sons.

Origin

From Hindi dādā.

Dada3

noun ˈdɑːdɑːˈdɑdɑ
  • An early 20th-century movement in art, literature, music, and film, repudiating and mocking artistic and social conventions and emphasizing the illogical and absurd.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • The cult of artistic and existential evasion in Dada and surrealism made suicide a leitmotif of literary life in inter-war France.
    • I would have to say that the movements of Dada and Surrealism have had a positive influence on me.
    • The spirit of Dada and the other avant-garde art movements was forged in the trenches of World War One.
    • Hopkins is concerned with the legacy of the late Dada which flowered in New York in the 1920s and in particular with the work of Duchamp, Picabia and Man Ray.
    • Burger used the term avant-garde only in reference to Futurism, Dada, and Surrealism.
    • The reader would never guess from this textbook that di Chirico exerted a huge influence on Dada, Surrealism and popular culture.
    • He describes his transition from Dada to surrealism as a compromise.
    • Does Brancusi come closer to the spiritualism of the Shaker society or to the witticism of Duchamp and Dada?
    • The ideologues of Futurism, Dada and Constructivism realised the potential for making works of outrage by collaging existing imagery.
    • Pieces in the show referenced Conceptualism, performance, Dada, realism and abstraction.
    • Collage has been used in many major art movements, for example Dada, Surrealism, and Pop art.
    • Strains of both Dada and Duchamp course through these found objects rendered into found poems.
    • Members were united by their interest in Marcel Duchamp, Dada and the role of chance in art.
    • Paolozzi, born in 1924, had even gone to Paris in the 1940s to study Dada and Surrealism at the source.
    • Amid the derangements of Dada and abstract expressionism she reverted to tradition.
    • After a few years, Dada was replaced by the dreamlike ideas of Surrealism, which continues to the present day.
    • Here are jumbled together manifestos from the Bauhaus, Surrealism, Dada, the Suprematists and the Futurists.
    • The time has come to think beyond the divides of Pop and Minimalism, of Dada and abstraction, and of avant-garde and modernism.
    • From the earliest days of Dada, Duchamp's iconoclastic vision had been at the forefront of the avant-garde.

Dada was launched in Zurich in 1916 by Tristan Tzara and others, soon merging with a similar group in New York. It favoured montage, collage, and the ready-made. Leading figures: Jean Arp, André Breton, Max Ernst, Man Ray, and Marcel Duchamp

Derivatives

  • Dadaism

  • noun ˈdɑːdəɪz(ə)mˈdɑdɑˌɪzəm
    • Dadaism, Surrealism, and Futurist performance activities seem to have shared a similar spirit of exploration, of breaking down boundaries, of looking to process instead of product.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • He briefly embraced Dadaism, but soon distanced himself from its more nihilistic expressions.
      • Abstract Expressionists also borrowed ideas from other modern art ‘isms’ such as Dadaism and Surrealism.
      • He arrived in Berlin in 1920, where he was influenced by Dadaism, Suprematism, and particularly Constructivism.
      • I always thought Dadaism was primarily a European movement, but clearly it must have had some influence in Asia.
  • Dadaist

  • adjective & noun ˈdɑːdəɪstˈdɑdɑəst
    • Like the kindred Surrealists and Dadaists before him, Spoerri favored activities that enhanced the role of chance in his art works.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • While living in Paris, Dali joined forces with a group of artists who called themselves the surrealists, then led by former Dadaist André Breton.
      • Film was an attractive medium for Dadaists such as Man Ray and Marcel Duchamp.
      • Techniques such as appropriation and collaging originated in the Arts, with the Cubists, Dadaists, and Surrealists at the beginning of the twentieth century.
      • The use of food as an artist material, for example, dates from the beginning of the 20th century, when Dadaists, Surrealists and Futurists first began experimenting with food as a medium, be it chocolate, bread, sausage or candy.
  • Dadaistic

  • adjectivedɑːdɑˈɪstɪk
    • I've become more than a little addicted to my Lomo-LCA, a Russian built camera which encourages a kind of Dadaistic way of taking pictures.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Ideally, Kropf would like Dali to be remembered for his early Dadaistic printing innovations.

Origin

French, literally 'hobby horse', the title of a review published in Zurich in 1916.

 
 

dada1

nounˈdädäˈdɑdɑ
informal
  • One's father.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • I love my dada and completely adore his eccentric ways.
    • The truth is that my dada is jealous of my fiancé because I'm his only girl and we were so close.
    • Young William loved these outings, so proud to be seen with his Dada.
    • My dada said that my mom left us too for doing groceries, when we were in bed, but my mom denied that.
    • There is no more wonderful gift in my life than my daughter, who is upstairs getting tucked into bed by her Dada as I write this.

Origin

Late 17th century: perhaps imitative of a young child's first syllables (see dad).

dada2

nounˈdädäˈdɑdɑ
Indian
  • 1An older brother or male cousin.

    Dada went to see off his father-in-law
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Born in Delhi to Punjabi parents who were refugees of the partition from Lahore, he has heard stories from his dadas.
    • My dada is old, so all he and his friends talk about is diseases.
    • Driving through jungle roads for three hours, we reached a village to find the remnants of a fire started by the dadas.
    • I had a meeting with about 90 dadas to discuss the future of their youth.
    • The Hindi play directed at the dadas of the city sent the crowd into peals of laughter.
    1. 1.1 A respectful form of address for an older male.
      Ram dada is my cousin's friend
      Example sentencesExamples
      • After Channu dada's request, the Sanghatana filed a complaint with the collector in September 2002, demanding the release of his sons.

Origin

From Hindi dādā.

Dada3

nounˈdädäˈdɑdɑ
  • An early-20th-century international movement in art, literature, music, and film, repudiating and mocking artistic and social conventions and emphasizing the illogical and absurd.

    Dada was launched in Zurich in 1916 by Tristan Tzara and others, soon merging with a similar group in New York. It favored montage, collage, and the ready-made. Leading figures: Jean Arp, André Breton, Max Ernst, Man Ray, and Marcel Duchamp

    Example sentencesExamples
    • I would have to say that the movements of Dada and Surrealism have had a positive influence on me.
    • Members were united by their interest in Marcel Duchamp, Dada and the role of chance in art.
    • Strains of both Dada and Duchamp course through these found objects rendered into found poems.
    • Amid the derangements of Dada and abstract expressionism she reverted to tradition.
    • Burger used the term avant-garde only in reference to Futurism, Dada, and Surrealism.
    • From the earliest days of Dada, Duchamp's iconoclastic vision had been at the forefront of the avant-garde.
    • Does Brancusi come closer to the spiritualism of the Shaker society or to the witticism of Duchamp and Dada?
    • Pieces in the show referenced Conceptualism, performance, Dada, realism and abstraction.
    • The time has come to think beyond the divides of Pop and Minimalism, of Dada and abstraction, and of avant-garde and modernism.
    • The spirit of Dada and the other avant-garde art movements was forged in the trenches of World War One.
    • He describes his transition from Dada to surrealism as a compromise.
    • The ideologues of Futurism, Dada and Constructivism realised the potential for making works of outrage by collaging existing imagery.
    • Here are jumbled together manifestos from the Bauhaus, Surrealism, Dada, the Suprematists and the Futurists.
    • After a few years, Dada was replaced by the dreamlike ideas of Surrealism, which continues to the present day.
    • Paolozzi, born in 1924, had even gone to Paris in the 1940s to study Dada and Surrealism at the source.
    • The cult of artistic and existential evasion in Dada and surrealism made suicide a leitmotif of literary life in inter-war France.
    • Collage has been used in many major art movements, for example Dada, Surrealism, and Pop art.
    • The reader would never guess from this textbook that di Chirico exerted a huge influence on Dada, Surrealism and popular culture.
    • Hopkins is concerned with the legacy of the late Dada which flowered in New York in the 1920s and in particular with the work of Duchamp, Picabia and Man Ray.

Origin

French, literally ‘hobby horse’, the title of a review published in Zurich in 1916.

 
 
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更新时间:2024/9/22 22:33:25