English to Arabic Dictionary anthropomorphic

anthropomorphic

مجسم
definition
adjective
The Greek, metaphysical concept of the Logos is in sharp contrast to the concept of a personal God described in anthropomorphic terms typical of Hebrew thought.
relating to or characterized by anthropomorphism.
translation of 'anthropomorphic'
adjective
مجسم
example
In describing elephants, 'anthropomorphic' terms are unavoidable.
To many commentators, the obliteration of the Buddhas seemed to hark back to a bygone age, reinforcing the widespread notion that Islamic culture is implacably hostile to 'anthropomorphic' art.
Many wine tasters have resorted to using 'anthropomorphic' terms such as aggressive, clumsy, gutsy and precocious.
Wallace always felt that ‘selection’ inappropriately imported 'anthropomorphic' notions of Nature choosing purposefully between variants into natural history.
Henry Williamson, for instance, rewrote his classic Tarka the Otter seventeen times in an effort to authenticate his representation and to excise all 'anthropomorphic' tendencies from his text.
In the story, the flu appears in 'anthropomorphic' form as a group of human beings who are heard discussing where they ought to go next to contaminate other people.
Variously amassed, the amalgams of abstract parts sometimes take on 'anthropomorphic' suggestions: masks with alien eyes peering through the cosmos, torsos and pelvises in bodices and twirling skirts.
While zooming through the cosmos, he collides with a tiny chunk of an asteroid that - wonder of wonders - contains a teeny, tiny functioning society of teeny, tiny little 'anthropomorphic' creatures.
The word means ‘old woman’ or ‘grandmother’ and refers to the vertical form, an 'anthropomorphic' usage similar to the derivation of pretzel from bracelli, because the twist of dough resembles folded arms.
An 'anthropomorphic' bear in a camouflage jacket was speaking to him!
This is a natural human reaction - why shouldn't an 'anthropomorphic' frog feel the same way?
Of course none of this is not really " elephant talk ", although Kipling assumes in his usual 'anthropomorphic' way that elephants can communicate complex ideas.
This ancient Greek poet crafted timeless morality tales using 'anthropomorphic' animals as characters.
The Greek, metaphysical concept of the Logos is in sharp contrast to the concept of a personal God described in 'anthropomorphic' terms typical of Hebrew thought.
First-person animal narratives, such as Black Beauty, are overtly 'anthropomorphic' fantasies and cannot operate within or even congruent to the framework of natural science.
As the shoot went on, people actually started to talk about the house in 'anthropomorphic' terms.
None of the characters in here are human, they're all furry or 'anthropomorphic' animals.
The Qur'an also uses 'anthropomorphic' language to describe God (See the beginning of this article).
Animal narratives, at their imaginative best, are not invitations to 'anthropomorphic' sentimentality, but rather literary extensions of natural history and a potentially potent ethical force.
Totally abstract, and indeterminate, purged of all 'anthropomorphic' and mythological qualities, God becomes the ominously ambiguous and threatening deity who evokes nothing but dread and terror.
No less clearly he rejects the childish 'anthropomorphic' trend of human thought.
She was thus well positioned to make respectful, informed, and unsentimental observations, and to deploy 'anthropomorphic' comparisons and metaphors in a sophisticated way.
‘The hand of God’ is an 'anthropomorphic' term for the creative power, providential care, and saving grace of God.
To claim otherwise would surely be to objectify music and to override the 'anthropomorphic' quality of musical engagement, at the root of which is the very possibility of surprise central to live performance.
They also realized that descriptions and explanations of observed phenomena could be phrased in mathematical or geometrical rather than 'anthropomorphic' terms.
Their cleverness includes the ability to amuse themselves while hiding by engaging in vocal displays, known 'anthropomorphically' as ‘discourses’, which they use to form and maintain social bonds and to compete for social prestige.
If I wanted to treat computers 'anthropomorphically' , like so many of my colleagues, I'd call this ‘artificial imagination.’
To speak more 'anthropomorphically' , God grieves at the situation we are in.
Many were derived 'anthropomorphically' from the dimensions of parts of the human anatomy.
His characterizations of the individuals within a society might be 'anthropomorphically' ascribed to sheep and wolves, with the wolves lined up on a spectrum of power lust or madness, from a category of good to bad.
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