释义 |
mech·a·nize \ˈmekəˌnīz\ transitive verb (-ed/-ing/-s) Usage: see -ize Etymology: mechan- + -ize 1. : to give the quality or structure of a machine to: as a. archaic : to reduce to orderly systematic method or procedure b. : to render automatic or routine : impart a deadening monotony to : deprive of spontaneity < Americans have mechanized their emotions and standardized their ideas — W.G.Carleton > 2. a. : to equip with machinery; especially : to substitute mechanical processes for human or animal labor in < shuts down marginal coal mines and mechanizes many of the rest, with resultant unemployment for miners — E.A.Lahey > b. : to equip (a military force) with armed and armored motor vehicles (as tanks and self-propelled cannon) — distinguished from motorize c. : to provide with mechanical power < mechanized weapons > 3. a. : to produce or reproduce by machine (an effect normally or basically produced directly by man) < an enormous advantage … over the more mechanized stimuli of the motion picture — Marc Connelly > < now music is mechanized in its full tonal range — Siegfried Giedion > b. : to devise or create with undue reliance on technique or mechanics < fail because of an application of formula, call it mechanized plotting — W.T.Scott > |