sketch


تلفظ آنلاینOxford 5000 vocabulary |C1|

sketch /sketʃ/ noun [countable]
sketch verb

پیش طرح
نقشه تقریبی، کروکی، شما، انگاره، نقشه ساده، شرح، پیش نویس آزمایشی، زمینه، پیش نویس چیزی را آماده کردن، طرح خلاصه، طراحی کلیات، علوم مهندسی: شرح خلاصه، معماری: پیشطرح، بازرگانی: رسم نمودن، علوم نظامی: طرح ساده
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[TahlilGaran] Persian Dictionary

sketch
[noun]
Synonyms:
- drawing, delineation, design, draft, outline, plan
[verb]
Synonyms:
- draw, delineate, depict, draft, outline, represent, rough out
Related Words: depict, diagram, diagrammatize, blueprint, delineate, line, draw, plot, trace, design, develop, detail, lay out, map (out)
English Thesaurus: draw, sketch, illustrate, doodle, scribble, ...

[TahlilGaran] English Synonym Dictionary

I. sketch1 /sketʃ/ noun [countable]
[Date: 1600-1700; Language: Dutch; Origin: schets, from Italian schizzo, from schizzare 'to splash']

1. a simple, quickly made drawing that does not show much detail
sketch of
Cantor drew a rough sketch of his apartment on a napkin.

2. a short humorous scene on a television programme, in a theatre etc, that is part of a larger show:
Her TV programme is made up of a series of comic sketches.

3. a short written or spoken description
sketch of
a brief sketch of the main weaknesses of the British economy
a thumbnail sketch (=very brief description) of topics treated in depth elsewhere

[TahlilGaran] Dictionary of Contemporary English

II. sketch2 verb

1. [intransitive and transitive] to draw a sketch of something

2. (also sketch out) [transitive] to describe something in a general way, giving the basic ideas:
Holford sketched a 10-year programme for rebuilding the city.
sketch in ↔ something phrasal verb
to add more information about something:
I’d like to sketch in a few details for you.

[TahlilGaran] Dictionary of Contemporary English

sketch
noun
I. quick drawing
ADJ. lightning, quick | rough | preliminary, preparatory | charcoal, ink, pencil, watercolour
VERB + SKETCH do, draw, make
SKETCH + NOUN book, pad | map | plan
PREP. in a/the ~ The family house appears in several of her sketches.
~ by a series of sketches by John Constable
~ for to make a sketch for an oil painting
~ of He did some rough sketches of the costumes.
 ⇒ Note at ART

[TahlilGaran] Collocations Dictionary

sketch
II. short description
ADJ. brief, thumbnail The talk began with a thumbnail sketch of the political situation at that time.
biographical, character
VERB + SKETCH give sb
PREP. ~ of He gave us character sketches of all his eccentric relations.

[TahlilGaran] Collocations Dictionary

sketch
III. short comic scene
ADJ. short | comic, satirical
VERB + SKETCH do, perform | write
PREP. ~ about a comic sketch about a talking cat

[TahlilGaran] Collocations Dictionary

draw to make a picture, pattern etc using a pen or pencil:
The children were asked to draw a picture of their families.
I’m going to art classes to learn how to draw.
sketch /sketʃ/ to draw a picture of something or someone quickly and without a lot of detail:
Roy took a pencil and sketched the bird quickly, before it moved.
illustrate to draw the pictures in a book:
It’s a beautiful book, illustrated by Arthur Rackham.
doodle /ˈduːdl/ to draw shapes or patterns without really thinking about what you are doing:
He was on the phone, doodling on his notepad as he spoke.
scribble to draw shapes or lines without making a definite picture or pattern. Small children do this before they have learned to draw or write:
At the age of two, she loved scribbling with crayons and coloured pencils.
trace to copy a picture by putting a piece of thin paper over it and drawing the lines that you can see through the paper:
First trace the map, and then copy it into your workbooks.
draw on somebody's experience
The books have drawn on the experience of practising teachers.
draw on somebody's knowledge
Fortunately I was able to draw on my own knowledge of the law.
draw on somebody's resources
The committee has drawn on the resources and skills of several local people.
draw on somebody's ideas
We hope that we will be able to draw on these ideas to develop the work further.
draw on somebody's expertise (=expert knowledge and experience)
Now we can draw on the expertise of some of the most talented network engineers.
draw up a plan/scheme
Local authorities have drawn up new plans for waste disposal.
draw up a proposal
The European Communities were drawing up proposals to control the export of chemicals.
draw up a list
They drew up a list of suitable candidates for the job.
draw up guidelines
A committee of teachers has drawn up guidelines for schools on how to deal with difficult students.
draw up a report
Environmental organizations have been involved in drawing up the report.
draw up a contract/agreement
Some people draw up a contract when they get married.
draw up a timetable/schedule
They haven’t yet drawn up a timetable for the elections.
draw up a programme
A small team has drawn up a programme of action.
draw up a constitution (=set of laws and principles that govern a country)
The first Czech constitution was drawn up here in 1920.
draw up a budget (=plan of how to spend the money that is available)
Each year business managers draw up a budget.
attraction noun [uncountable and countable] a feature or quality that makes people like, want, or feel interested in something:
The excitement is part of the attraction of the job.
For many mothers, the attraction of childcare in the workplace is the chance to be near their children.
The idea of living in another country does have a certain attraction.
appeal noun [uncountable and countable] a quality that makes people like something or someone:
Much of Corfu’s appeal lies in its lively night life.
I don’t understand the appeal of this kind of music.
the lure of something noun [singular] a very attractive quality that makes you want something very much – often used about something that has a bad effect or influence:
It’s hard to resist the lure of credit cards and easy money.
The lure of urban life is especially powerful for the young.
charm noun [uncountable and countable] a pleasant quality that someone or something has that makes people like them, feel attracted to them, or be influenced by them:
He was physically attractive and possessed considerable personal charm.
The book captures Savannah’s old Southern charm perfectly.
glamour noun [uncountable] the attractive and exciting quality that is connected with wealth and success:
the glamour of Monte Carlo
Hollywood glamour
The world of modelling is famous for its glitz and glamour.

[TahlilGaran] English Thesaurus

drawing a picture drawn with a pencil, pen, crayon etc:
I did a drawing of the front of the house.
sketch a drawing that is done quickly and has few details:
When she was traveling, she drew quick sketches of the places she’d seen.
doodle a shape or pattern that you draw when you are bored or thinking about other things:
His schoolbooks were always covered in doodles.
graffiiti drawings or writing that people secretly put on walls or other public places:
Vandals had covered the station in graffiti.
comic strip a series of pictures drawn inside boxes that tell a story, especially in a newspaper or magazine:
Asterix started off in a comic strip.
cartoon a funny drawing in a newspaper or magazine:
There is a 'New Yorker' cartoon which depicts various inventions for keeping warm.

[TahlilGaran] English Thesaurus

picture shapes, lines etc painted or drawn on a surface, especially as a piece of art, and often showing what someone or something looks like:
a picture of a horse
He painted the picture in 1890, just before he died.
drawing a picture drawn with a pencil, pen etc:
We had to do a drawing of a sunflower.
sketch a picture that is drawn quickly:
I made a quick sketch of the kind of room we wanted.
painting a picture made using paint:
The painting now hangs in the Museum of Modern Art.
Picasso did several paintings of her.
portrait a picture of a person:
The portrait was painted by Rembrandt.
landscape a picture of a place, especially in the countryside or the mountains:
Constable painted mainly landscapes.
cartoon a funny drawing in a newspaper or magazine that tells a story or a joke:
A cartoon in the New York Times showed the President talking to Osama Bin Laden.
comic strip a series of pictures drawn inside boxes that tell a story:
Charles Schultz was famous for his cartoon strip about Snoopy and Charlie Brown.
caricature a funny drawing of someone that makes a part of someone’s face or body look bigger, worse etc than it really is, especially in a funny way:
He is famous for his caricatures of politicans.
illustration a picture in a book:
The book has over 100 pages of illustrations, most of them in colour.
poster a large picture printed on paper that you stick to a wall as decoration:
old movie posters
There were lots of posters of pop bands on her bedroom wall.
print a picture that is usually produced on a printing press, and is one of a series of copies of the same picture:
a limited edition of lithographic prints by John Lennon
image a picture – used especially when talking about what the picture is like, or the effect it has on you:
He produced some memorable images.
a beautiful image
Some of the images are deeply disturbing.
artwork pictures or photographs, especially ones that have been produced to be used in a book or magazine:
We are still waiting for the artwork to come back from the printers.
imagine to form a picture or idea in your mind about what something might be like:
When I think of Honolulu, I imagine long white beaches and palm trees.
I can’t really imagine being a millionaire.
visualize to form a picture of someone or something in your mind, especially something that is definitely going to happen or exist in the future:
Anna visualized meeting Greg again at the airport.
The finished house may be hard to visualize.
envisage /ɪnˈvɪzɪdʒ/ especially British English, envision to imagine something as possible or likely to happen in the future:
How do you envisage your career developing over the next ten years?
They had envisioned the creation of a single armed force, small but efficient.
conceive of something formal to imagine a situation, especially one that is difficult to imagine:
For many people, music is so important that they cannot conceive of life without it.
fantasize to imagine something exciting that you would like to happen, but that is very unlikely to happen:
I used to fantasize about becoming a film star.
daydream to imagine pleasant things, so that you forget where you are and what you should be doing:
Mark began to daydream, and didn’t even hear the teacher’s question.
hallucinate to imagine that you are seeing things that are not really there, especially because you are ill or have taken drugs:
The drug that can cause some people to hallucinate.
When I saw the walls moving, I thought I must be hallucinating.

[TahlilGaran] English Thesaurus


TahlilGaran Online Dictionary ver 18.0
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TahlilGaran : دیکشنری آنلاین تحلیلگران ( معنی sketch ) | علیرضا معتمد , دیکشنری تحلیلگران , وب اپلیکیشن , تحلیلگران , دیکشنری , آنلاین , آیفون , IOS , آموزش مجازی 4.57 : 2113
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