Online Google Dictionary

montage 中文解釋 wordnet sense Collocation Usage Collins Definition
Noun
/mänˈtäZH/,/mōn-/,/mōN-/,
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montages, plural;
  1. The process or technique of selecting, editing, and piecing together separate sections of film to form a continuous whole

  2. A sequence of film resulting from this
    • - a dazzling montage of the movie's central banquet scene
  3. The technique of producing a new composite whole from fragments of pictures, text, or music
    • - the play often verged on montage

  1. collage: a paste-up made by sticking together pieces of paper or photographs to form an artistic image; "he used his computer to make a collage of pictures superimposed on a map"
  2. Montage is the second compilation album by saxophonist Kenny G. It was released by BMG in 1993.
  3. CityPlace is the name given to a large section of former railway land in downtown Toronto, Ontario, Canada that has been redeveloped for multi-use purpose. The term has been more recently used for a large multi-tower condo development in the Harbourfront district. ...
  4. Montage is a technique in film editing in which a series of short shots are edited into a sequence to condense space, time, and information. It is usually used to suggest the passage of time, rather than to create symbolic meaning as it does in Soviet montage theory.
  5. In music, montage (literally "putting together") or sound collage ("gluing together") is a technique where sound objects or compositions, including songs, are created from collage, also known as montage, the use of portions of previous recordings or scores. ...
  6. Montage is screenwriting software developed for Mac OS X. Montage allows the creation, editing, and management of screenplays on Macintosh computers. Montage can import Final Draft documents. text and RTF formatted files, it includes custom, pre-formatted templates for film, TV, and theater .
  7. The Montage programs, a filmed history of the 1960s and 1970s with a Cleveland perspective, are composed of more than three hundred documentary films which were shown primarily on WKYC-TV, Cleveland's NBC affiliate, from September 1965 to December 1978. ...
  8. An art form consisting of putting together or assembling various smaller pictures to create a larger work; An analogous literary, musical or other heterogenous artistic composite; To combine or depict into a montage
  9. a single image formed from the assembling of several images.
  10. The assembly of shots and the portrayal of action or ideas through the use of many short shots. (Film Editing)
  11. the official literary folio of Varsitarian
  12. An artwork comprising of portions of various existing images such as from photographs or prints and arranged so that they join, overlap or blend to create a new image.
  13. 1) the juxtaposition of seemingly unrelated shots or scenes which, when combined, achieve meaning (as in, shot A and shot B together give rise to an third idea, which is then supported by shot C, and so on), or 2) a series of related shots which lead the viewer to a desired conclusion (as in, ...
  14. A cinematic device used to show a series of scenes, all related and building to some conclusion.
  15. the term applied to the testing variables and their order on polysomnogram paper or a computer monitor, such EEG, EOG, heart rate, and so on.
  16. Combining parts of several photographs or drawings to produce a new single image.
  17. This cinematic code, taken from the French monter ('to assemble'), is used in various ways in film theory. The most general usage refers to editing, to the process of editing shots into a sequence or to editing sequences into the form of a complete film. ...
  18. (dynamic editing, expressive montage, conditional montage) A method of putting shots together in such a way that dissimilar materials are juxtaposed to make a statement. A shot of a man followed by a shot of a peacock, for example, declares that the man is pompous. (See Editing.)
  19. in film, a technique of editing in which several images are juxtaposed, superimposed, or shown in succession, to present an idea or theme greater than the sum of the individual images
  20. The manner of arranging pairs of electrodes to produce channels of EEG information.
  21. In artwork, several photographs pasted on one artboard in a pleasing manner. They can be placed on angles, overlapped, cut to various shapes, etc.
  22. Photographic prints made by re-photographing a collage or montage of two or more photographic prints or pieces of photographic prints to which drawing, painting, printing, or other two-dimensional objects may be added.
  23. Technique where illustrations (photos) or fragments of them are assembled and mounted to create one picture
  24. The production of a composite image made from various elements as, for example, in the combination of photographic positives or negatives with drawn stencils in screenprinting.
  25. an example front-end for Udanax-gold, written in Scheme, a flavor of Lisp.