fresco
fresco 英 [ˈfreskəʊ] 美 [ˈfreskoʊ]
n. 壁画
名词复数:frescoes
- Whether you've studied art history or not, you're probably familiar with the world's most famous fresco: Michelangelo's paintings on the walls and ceiling of the Sistine Chapel in Rome.
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- n. 壁画
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1. The medium of fresco makes great demands on a painter's techinical skill.
壁画这种绘画形式对画家的技巧有很高要求。
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2. It is also interesting to see how that Neolithic-age fresco is in compliance with today’s architectural trends.
同时,一探究竟,看看新石器时代的壁画是如何与现今的建筑发展趋势相契合的? 也将非常有趣。
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3. We show this in a scene in the Sistine Chapel [in Rome] where we create a big crack in the fresco of God and Adam.
我们将这个观点放到了发生在罗马西斯廷教堂的一幕里——一幅绘有上帝与亚当的壁画发生严重断裂。
- fresco (n.) 1590s, in fresco, literally "in fresh," with a sense of "painted on fresh mortar or plaster," from Italian fresco "cool, fresh," as a noun "coolness, fresh air," from Old High German frisc, from Proto-Germanic *friskaz (see fresh (adj.1)). As a verb from 1849. Related: Frescoed. In 17c.-18c. it also could mean "coolness, shade."
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