slovo | definícia |
animate (encz) | animate,animovat v: Zdeněk Brož |
animate (encz) | animate,oživit v: Zdeněk Brož |
animate (encz) | animate,podnítit v: Zdeněk Brož |
animate (encz) | animate,životný |
Animate (gcide) | Animate \An"i*mate\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Animated; p. pr. &
vb. n. Animating.] [L. animatus, p. p. of animare, fr.
anima breath, soul; akin to animus soul, mind, Gr. ? wind,
Skr. an to breathe, live, Goth. us-anan to expire (us- out),
Icel. ["o]nd breath, anda to breathe, OHG. ando anger. Cf.
Animal.]
1. To give natural life to; to make alive; to quicken; as,
the soul animates the body.
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2. To give powers to, or to heighten the powers or effect of;
as, to animate a lyre. --Dryden.
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3. To give spirit or vigor to; to stimulate or incite; to
inspirit; to rouse; to enliven.
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The more to animate the people, he stood on high . .
. and cried unto them with a loud voice. --Knolles.
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Syn: To enliven; inspirit; stimulate; exhilarate; inspire;
instigate; rouse; urge; cheer; prompt; incite; quicken;
gladden.
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Animate (gcide) | Animate \An"i*mate\, a. [L. animatus, p. p.]
Endowed with life; alive; living; animated; lively.
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The admirable structure of animate bodies. --Bentley.
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animate (wn) | animate
adj 1: belonging to the class of nouns that denote living
beings; "the word `dog' is animate" [ant: inanimate]
2: endowed with animal life as distinguished from plant life;
"we are animate beings" [ant: inanimate, non-living,
nonliving]
3: endowed with feeling and unstructured consciousness; "the
living knew themselves just sentient puppets on God's stage"-
T.E.Lawrence [syn: sentient, animate] [ant: insensate,
insentient]
v 1: heighten or intensify; "These paintings exalt the
imagination" [syn: inspire, animate, invigorate,
enliven, exalt]
2: give lifelike qualities to; "animated cartoons" [syn:
animize, animise, animate]
3: make lively; "let's liven up this room a bit" [syn:
enliven, liven, liven up, invigorate, animate]
[ant: blunt, deaden]
4: give new life or energy to; "A hot soup will revive me";
"This will renovate my spirits"; "This treatment repaired my
health" [syn: animate, recreate, reanimate, revive,
renovate, repair, quicken, vivify, revivify] |
| podobné slovo | definícia |
animated (mass) | animated
- animovaný |
animated (encz) | animated,animovaný adj: Ritchie |
animated cartoon (encz) | animated cartoon,animovaný film |
animatedly (encz) | animatedly,rušně adv: Zdeněk Brož |
animates (encz) | animates,animuje Zdeněk Brož |
exanimate (encz) | exanimate,bezduchý adj: Zdeněk Brožexanimate,mrtvý adj: Zdeněk Brož |
inanimate (encz) | inanimate,neživotní inanimate,neživý adj: Zdeněk Brož |
inanimately (encz) | inanimately, |
inanimateness (encz) | inanimateness,mrtvost n: Zdeněk Brožinanimateness,neživost n: Zdeněk Brožinanimateness,neživotnost n: Zdeněk Brož |
reanimate (encz) | reanimate,oživit v: Zdeněk Brožreanimate,reanimovat v: Zdeněk Brožreanimate,vzkřísit v: Zdeněk Brož |
reanimated (encz) | reanimated,oživený adj: Zdeněk Brožreanimated,oživil v: Zdeněk Brožreanimated,vzkřísil v: Zdeněk Brožreanimated,vzkříšený adj: Zdeněk Brož |
unanimated (encz) | unanimated, adj: |
Animate (gcide) | Animate \An"i*mate\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Animated; p. pr. &
vb. n. Animating.] [L. animatus, p. p. of animare, fr.
anima breath, soul; akin to animus soul, mind, Gr. ? wind,
Skr. an to breathe, live, Goth. us-anan to expire (us- out),
Icel. ["o]nd breath, anda to breathe, OHG. ando anger. Cf.
Animal.]
1. To give natural life to; to make alive; to quicken; as,
the soul animates the body.
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2. To give powers to, or to heighten the powers or effect of;
as, to animate a lyre. --Dryden.
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3. To give spirit or vigor to; to stimulate or incite; to
inspirit; to rouse; to enliven.
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The more to animate the people, he stood on high . .
. and cried unto them with a loud voice. --Knolles.
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Syn: To enliven; inspirit; stimulate; exhilarate; inspire;
instigate; rouse; urge; cheer; prompt; incite; quicken;
gladden.
[1913 Webster]Animate \An"i*mate\, a. [L. animatus, p. p.]
Endowed with life; alive; living; animated; lively.
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The admirable structure of animate bodies. --Bentley.
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Animated (gcide) | Animate \An"i*mate\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Animated; p. pr. &
vb. n. Animating.] [L. animatus, p. p. of animare, fr.
anima breath, soul; akin to animus soul, mind, Gr. ? wind,
Skr. an to breathe, live, Goth. us-anan to expire (us- out),
Icel. ["o]nd breath, anda to breathe, OHG. ando anger. Cf.
Animal.]
1. To give natural life to; to make alive; to quicken; as,
the soul animates the body.
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2. To give powers to, or to heighten the powers or effect of;
as, to animate a lyre. --Dryden.
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3. To give spirit or vigor to; to stimulate or incite; to
inspirit; to rouse; to enliven.
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The more to animate the people, he stood on high . .
. and cried unto them with a loud voice. --Knolles.
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Syn: To enliven; inspirit; stimulate; exhilarate; inspire;
instigate; rouse; urge; cheer; prompt; incite; quicken;
gladden.
[1913 Webster]Animated \An"i*ma`ted\, a.
Endowed with life; full of life or spirit; indicating
animation; lively; vigorous. "Animated sounds." --Pope.
"Animated bust." --Gray. "Animated descriptions." --Lewis.
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Animated oats (gcide) | Oat \Oat\ ([=o]t), n.; pl. Oats ([=o]ts). [OE. ote, ate, AS.
[=a]ta, akin to Fries. oat. Of uncertain origin.]
1. (Bot.) A well-known cereal grass (Avena sativa), and its
edible grain, used as food and fodder; -- commonly used in
the plural and in a collective sense.
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2. A musical pipe made of oat straw. [Obs.] --Milton.
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Animated oats or Animal oats (Bot.), A grass ({Avena
sterilis}) much like oats, but with a long spirally
twisted awn which coils and uncoils with changes of
moisture, and thus gives the grains an apparently
automatic motion.
Oat fowl (Zool.), the snow bunting; -- so called from its
feeding on oats. [Prov. Eng.]
Oat grass (Bot.), the name of several grasses more or less
resembling oats, as Danthonia spicata, {Danthonia
sericea}, and Arrhenatherum avenaceum, all common in
parts of the United States.
To feel one's oats,
(a) to be conceited or self-important. [Slang]
(b) to feel lively and energetic.
To sow one's wild oats, to indulge in youthful dissipation.
--Thackeray.
Wild oats (Bot.), a grass (Avena fatua) much resembling
oats, and by some persons supposed to be the original of
cultivated oats.
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Animated picture (gcide) | Picture \Pic"ture\, n. [L. pictura, fr. pingere, pictum, to
paint: cf. F. peinture. See Paint.]
1. The art of painting; representation by painting. [Obs.]
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Any well-expressed image . . . either in picture or
sculpture. --Sir H.
Wotton.
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2. A representation of anything (as a person, a landscape, a
building) upon canvas, paper, or other surface, produced
by means of painting, drawing, engraving, photography,
etc.; a representation in colors. By extension, a figure;
a model.
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Pictures and shapes are but secondary objects.
--Bacon.
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The young king's picture . . . in virgin wax.
--Howell.
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3. An image or resemblance; a representation, either to the
eye or to the mind; that which, by its likeness, brings
vividly to mind some other thing; as, a child is the
picture of his father; the man is the picture of grief.
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My eyes make pictures when they are shut.
--Coleridge.
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Note: Picture is often used adjectively, or in forming
self-explaining compounds; as, picture book or
picture-book, picture frame or picture-frame, picture
seller or picture-seller, etc.
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Animated picture, a moving picture.
Picture gallery, a gallery, or large apartment, devoted to
the exhibition of pictures.
Picture red, a rod of metal tube fixed to the walls of a
room, from which pictures are hung.
Picture writing.
(a) The art of recording events, or of expressing
messages, by means of pictures representing the
actions or circumstances in question. --Tylor.
(b) The record or message so represented; as, the picture
writing of the American Indians.
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Syn: Picture, Painting.
Usage: Every kind of representation by drawing or painting is
a picture, whether made with oil colors, water colors,
pencil, crayons, or India ink; strictly, a painting is
a picture made by means of colored paints, usually
applied moist with a brush.
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Animatedly (gcide) | Animatedly \An"i*ma`ted*ly\, adv.
With animation.
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Animater (gcide) | Animater \An"i*ma`ter\, n.
One who animates. --De Quincey.
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Disanimate (gcide) | Disanimate \Dis*an"i*mate\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Disanimated;
p. pr. & vb. n. Disanimating.]
1. To deprive of life. [R.] --Cudworth.
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2. To deprive of spirit; to dishearten. --Shak.
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Disanimated (gcide) | Disanimate \Dis*an"i*mate\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Disanimated;
p. pr. & vb. n. Disanimating.]
1. To deprive of life. [R.] --Cudworth.
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2. To deprive of spirit; to dishearten. --Shak.
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Exanimate (gcide) | Exanimate \Ex*an"i*mate\, v. t.
To deprive of animation or of life. [Obs.]
[1913 Webster]Exanimate \Ex*an"i*mate\, a. [L. exanimatus, p. p. of exanimare
to deprive of life or spirit; ex out + anima air, breath,
life, spirit.]
1. Lifeless; dead. [R.] "Carcasses exanimate." --Spenser.
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2. Destitute of animation; spiritless; disheartened. [R.]
"Pale . . . wretch, exanimate by love." --Thomson.
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Inanimate (gcide) | Inanimate \In*an"i*mate\, v. t. [Pref. in- in (or intensively) +
animate.]
To animate. [Obs.] --Donne.
[1913 Webster]Inanimate \In*an"i*mate\, a. [L. inanimatus; pref. in- not +
animatus animate.]
Not animate; destitute of life or spirit; lifeless; dead;
inactive; dull; as, stones and earth are inanimate
substances.
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Grieving, if aught inanimate e'er grieves. --Byron.
Syn: Lifeless; dead; inert; inactive; dull; soulless;
spiritless. See Lifeless.
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Inanimated (gcide) | Inanimated \In*an"i*ma`ted\, a.
Destitute of life; lacking animation; unanimated. --Pope.
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Inanimateness (gcide) | Inanimateness \In*an"i*mate*ness\, n.
The quality or state of being inanimate.
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The deadness and inanimateness of the subject. --W.
Montagu.
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Interanimate (gcide) | Interanimate \In`ter*an"i*mate\, v. t.
To animate or inspire mutually. [Obs.] --Donne.
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Reanimate (gcide) | Reanimate \Re*an"i*mate\ (r[-e]*[a^]n"[i^]*m[=a]t), v. t.
To animate anew; to restore to animation or life; to infuse
new life, vigor, spirit, or courage into; to revive; to
reinvigorate; as, to reanimate a drowned person; to reanimate
disheartened troops; to reanimate languid spirits.
--Glanvill.
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Transanimate (gcide) | Transanimate \Trans*an"i*mate\ (tr[a^]ns*[a^]n"[i^]*m[=a]t), v.
t. [imp. & p. p. Transanimated
(tr[a^]ns*[a^]n"[i^]*m[=a]`t[e^]d); p. pr. & vb. n.
Transanimating.] [Trans- + animate.]
To animate with a soul conveyed from another body. [R.] --Bp.
J. King (1608).
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Transanimated (gcide) | Transanimate \Trans*an"i*mate\ (tr[a^]ns*[a^]n"[i^]*m[=a]t), v.
t. [imp. & p. p. Transanimated
(tr[a^]ns*[a^]n"[i^]*m[=a]`t[e^]d); p. pr. & vb. n.
Transanimating.] [Trans- + animate.]
To animate with a soul conveyed from another body. [R.] --Bp.
J. King (1608).
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Unanimate (gcide) | Unanimate \U*nan"i*mate\, a. [See Unanimous.]
Unanimous. [Obs.]
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Unanimated (gcide) | Unanimated \Unanimated\
See animated. |
animate being (wn) | animate being
n 1: a living organism characterized by voluntary movement [syn:
animal, animate being, beast, brute, creature,
fauna] |
animate thing (wn) | animate thing
n 1: a living (or once living) entity [syn: living thing,
animate thing] |
animated (wn) | animated
adj 1: having life or vigor or spirit; "an animated and
expressive face"; "animated conversation"; "became very
animated when he heard the good news" [syn: animated,
alive] [ant: unanimated]
2: made to appear to move as living creatures do; "an animated
cartoon"; "animated puppets" |
animated cartoon (wn) | animated cartoon
n 1: a film made by photographing a series of cartoon drawings
to give the illusion of movement when projected in rapid
sequence [syn: cartoon, animated cartoon, toon] |
animated oat (wn) | animated oat
n 1: Mediterranean oat held to be progenitor of modern
cultivated oat [syn: wild red oat, animated oat, {Avene
sterilis}] |
animatedly (wn) | animatedly
adv 1: in an animated manner; "they talked animatedly" |
animateness (wn) | animateness
n 1: the property of being animated; having animal life as
distinguished from plant life [syn: animateness,
aliveness, liveness] [ant: inanimateness,
lifelessness] |
exanimate (wn) | exanimate
adj 1: deprived of life; no longer living; "a lifeless body"
[syn: lifeless, exanimate] |
inanimate (wn) | inanimate
adj 1: belonging to the class of nouns denoting nonliving
things; "the word `car' is inanimate" [ant: animate]
2: not endowed with life; "the inorganic world is inanimate";
"inanimate objects" [syn: inanimate, nonliving, {non-
living}] [ant: animate]
3: appearing dead; not breathing or having no perceptible pulse;
"an inanimate body"; "pulseless and dead" [syn: breathless,
inanimate, pulseless] |
inanimateness (wn) | inanimateness
n 1: not having life [syn: inanimateness, lifelessness]
[ant: aliveness, animateness, liveness] |
reanimate (wn) | reanimate
v 1: give new life or energy to; "A hot soup will revive me";
"This will renovate my spirits"; "This treatment repaired
my health" [syn: animate, recreate, reanimate,
revive, renovate, repair, quicken, vivify,
revivify] |
reanimated (wn) | reanimated
adj 1: given fresh life or vigor or spirit; "stirred by revived
hopes" [syn: reanimated, revived] |
unanimated (wn) | unanimated
adj 1: not animated or enlivened; dull [ant: alive,
animated] |
animated gif (foldoc) | Animated GIF
(GIF89a) A variant of the GIF
image format, often used on web pages to
provide moving icons and banners.
The GIF89a format supports multiple "frames" that give the
impression of motion when displayed in sequence, much like a
flip book. The animation may repeat continuously or play
once.
Animated GIFs aren't supported by earlier web browsers,
however the first frame of the image is still shown.
There are many utilities to create animated GIFs from a
sequence of individual GIF files. There are also utilities
that will produce animated GIFs automatically from a piece of
text or a single image.
One problem with this format is the size of the files
produced, as they are by definition a sequence of individual
images. Apart from minimising the number of frames, the best
way to decrease file size is to assist the LZW compression
by using blocks of solid colour, avoid dithering, and use
fewer colours. If areas of an image don't change from one
frame to another, they don't need to be redrawn so make the
area a transparent block in the second frame.
(1999-08-01)
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