Similar words: dramatization, acclimatisation, dramatist, dramatise, privatisation, democratisation, dramatis personae, amortisation. Meaning: n. 1. conversion into dramatic form 2. a dramatic representation.
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(1) Useless information Perhaps the essential clue to dramatisation was given in the discovery that new born babies enjoy solving problems.
(2) His great work, written in exile, is a dramatisation of his own fate, an extended attack upon his enemies—and, incidentally, the first great work to be written in his native Tuscan.
(3) A new television series is the latest dramatisation of the Camelot myth.
(4) The programme, a dramatisation of the epic journey sperm undertake in their quest to fertilise the egg, reveals other fertility secrets.
(5) What was between them was, I vaguely recall, a children's classic drama serial, i.e. Charles Dickens dramatisations etc.
(6) As late as 1938, Orson Welles was able (unintentionally) to trigger mass panic in the United States with a masterful radio dramatisation of his near-namesake's novel.
(7) It is impossible, I think, to refuse assent to the suggestion of those who see in it a dramatisation of the Origin of Justice.
(8) But by then, a film may feel superfluous to Rand's most loyal fans; events unfolding around them will have been dramatisation enough.
(9) Not only guide the students to watch movies in the content, form and style, but also note the invisible sound dramatisation , and the actual control function.
More similar words: dramatization, acclimatisation, dramatist, dramatise, privatisation, democratisation, dramatis personae, amortisation, digitisation, dramatic, dramatize, rationalisation, nationalisation, dramatically, melodramatic, dramatic irony, melodramatically, amalgamation, utilisation, atomisation, realisation, minimisation, organisation, maximisation, vocalisation, normalisation, mobilisation, immunisation, colonisation, finalisation.