in BRIT, also use 英国英语亦用 dramatise
1 VERB [usually passive] 将(书或故事)改编成剧本;将…搬上舞台(或银幕);用戏剧形式表现 If a book or story
is dramatized, it is written or presented as a play, film, or television drama.
将(书或故事)改编成剧本;将…搬上舞台(或银幕);用戏剧形式表现 2 VERB 使戏剧化;戏剧性地表现;夸张 If you say that someone
dramatizes a situation or event, you mean that they try to make it seem more serious, more important, or more exciting than it really is.
使戏剧化;戏剧性地表现;夸张 [disapproval] [Also VERB] 3 VERB 使引人注目;使扣人心弦 If something that happens or is done
dramatizes a situation, it focuses people's attention on the situation in a dramatic way.
使引人注目;使扣人心弦 -
More than 400 exiles were on a dawn-to-dusk hunger strike to dramatize their plight. [VERB noun]
400 多名流亡者举行从早到晚的绝食抗议来让人们关注他们的苦难。
-
The need for change has been dramatized by plummeting bank profits. [VERB noun]
改革的必要性由于银行利润的暴跌而凸显。
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