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Перевод: flatness
[существительное] плоскость ; ровность ; пологость ; безвкусица ; прямота ; скука ; вялость ; решительность ; категоричность ; настильность
Тезаурус:
- Far off, upon the silver mere, would rise a puff of smoke from a punt, invisible from its flatness and its white paint.
- Then, using spirit-level and pegs as a builder lays a concrete floor, level it to the flatness of a billiard table.
- The decorative flatness and the higher colour of Japanese art also follow as products of the same climatic necessity.
- From the Land Rover I could see the awful brown flatness.
- This ascetic, strong-willed young man, dominating yet dull-toned in personality to the point of satanic flatness, captured as if in his own despite the imagination of the day.
- The quiet flatness of her voice was mirrored by the fatalism he saw in her eyes.
- So it was that on a golden autumn evening, towards mid-September of 1937, I came to write my -30- to a career of journalism cum radio, and sat watching the flatness of the prairies give way to rising foothills as the twin-engined CPR "Dominion" crawled westward up the slopes of the mountain.
- precise definition, clear articulation, accurate perspective below, he wrote (and Goldberg typed), fluidity, flatness, cloudiness above.
- The flatness is a shame, because this is a public service: you can glean from the programme an idea both of how irrational the law can be, and of how flimsy most people's understanding of it is.
- UNTIL six or seven years ago, outsiders associated East Anglia with fens, flatness and the vanished Edwardian nannies of Frinton.
- She seemed to have the form of an ironing-board, yet that flatness of rump and breast was apparent only, achieved by the unrevealing clothes in which she chose to conceal herself.
- Distinct from flatness of top and from perspective of bottom, he wrote.
- Here were audio spaces that, in certain instances, bled around comers out of sight of their sources; sculptural/architectural spaces around and through which the viewer must travel; virtual spaces of onscreen worlds; visual spaces of Greenbergian flatness, for example in Susan Hiller's well-known Belshazzar's Feast (1983-;4), where images of flame move towards the purity of pixels (though she also devotes attention to the generation of images and gestalts from the eye itself); geographical spaces, notably in the move of Judith Goddard's environmental sculpture, Electron (1987), from Dartmoor indoors.
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