English to Arabic Dictionary evocative

evocative

مذكر
definition
adjective
powerfully evocative lyrics
bringing strong images, memories, or feelings to mind.
example
Expect an 'evocative' journey into the heart of darkness where the sins of the past are revisited in the present.
I thought at the time that this was merely a moving and 'evocative' metaphor for the loss of love.
Much has been made of the 'evocative' power of this Icelandic quartet.
He gathered the dust near the site, and used it to create a hauntingly 'evocative' piece.
Her singing voice, in contrast, is strong and helps create a striking and 'evocative' work.
As death draws near, 'evocative' , atmospheric images are offered up to the reader.
Few symbols are as 'evocative' or as powerful as those that remind us of our childhood.
The study has that 'evocative' smell of newly cut timber and wood glue about it as the components are brought in and leant against the wall.
It is a response that is highly charged, 'evocative' and expressed with an obvious degree of emotional insight.
With little traffic on the roads, travelling by bike remains one of the most 'evocative' ways to explore South America.
Now new generations can become acquainted with this powerful, 'evocative' and moving story.
The image becomes abstract, but is 'evocative' of specific styles of modernist painting.
His powerful and 'evocative' voice and his memory will live on in our hearts.
But as soon as you put on the headphones and start the audio tour, it becomes a powerfully 'evocative' place.
Being the best, the stories are in the most vivid and 'evocative' style of narration.
Sarah, 23, aims to bring back 'evocative' memories for anyone with a passion for musicals.
I certainly feel he has a way with words and was able to paint some very 'evocative' images, as well explain some dense concepts.
This image is perhaps the most detailed and least 'evocative' of those on show.
I thought it made an 'evocative' image and leaned into the open with my camera.
The remixes here sample the 'evocative' hooks and then simply loop them without the progression that is so much a part of most of his output.
During the late 1960s, Smithson had created a number of memorable land-based artworks, including Spiral Jetty on Utah's Great Salt Lake and the 'evocatively' volcanic Closed Mirror Square of 1969.
The whir of the machines, the changing tones, colors and degree of focus, the rhythmic progression of frames and the colloquial style of subtitles (with their occasional spelling errors) add greatly to the 'evocativeness' of the whole.
(She has it all take place in one 'evocatively' described place, then wants a scene-change ten minutes from the end).
I use this phrase here only because of its 'evocativeness' and ability to capture perfectly the issues that I would like to address in this paper.
And they are consistent across media in content and emotional 'evocativeness' .
Photographs convey their singularity and pragmatic making, but don't capture their sly humor and 'evocativeness' .
The conservative climate that prevailed five decades ago, with the songs and movies of those years - all these are 'evocatively' captured in the letters and the illustrations in the book.
Aristotle's Poetics contains a sentence that stands out for its simplicity and 'evocativeness' : ‘Sophocles said that he himself created characters such as should exist, whereas Euripides created ones such as actually do exist’.
Most 'evocatively' , an image of a setting sun marks the passage of a single day throughout the course of the play, holding true to Aristotle's belief that all good tragedy should take place within 24 hours.
However, another source of that success has lain in the extent to which organizing among women and Hispanic and black workers has been linked, even if only 'evocatively' , to a larger struggle for social justice.
Credits: Google Translate
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