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synopsized
verb
Past of synopsize
Exact(6)
Minimal art related itself to new forms of public space — corporate lobbies and plazas, airports, malls, and freeways, synopsized in white-box galleries — which seemed to render obsolete the contemplation of discrete pictures and sculptures.
In much of Tilghman's early fiction, history — local history, family history — is something that's ducked gracefully, synopsized anecdotally.
And then there's Orlando Bunnel, Bob Dollar's school friend, an "evil fat boy" who introduces him to movies like "Rat Women" and "The Corpse Grinders" (the former zestily synopsized by Proulx).
According to testimony, which the S.L.D.N. has synopsized (Army transcripts have not been released), Justin Fisher's mood, usually foul, grew malignant in the days that followed his trip.
The show, with a circular stage surrounded by a horse track, is presented in Farsi; the story is synopsized in the program but there is no translation.
The menu button malfunctioned again as we were forced to watch three successive, synopsized versions of what appeared to be lengthier fictitious narratives.
Similar(22)
June 2 2014 July 20 201414 Instead of synopsizing the rapper Tupac Shakur's life and death — he was killed in a drive-by shooting, in 1996 — this new musical uses his songs to tell a fictional but familiar story of life in a gang-addled neighborhood.
Thomas Harrison, a seventeenth-century English inventor, devised a cabinet that he called the Ark of Studies: readers could synopsize and excerpt books and then arrange their notes by subject on a series of labelled metal hooks, somewhat in the manner of a card index.
Nuclear catastrophe has wiped out most of the American population, and a small group of survivors (the wonderfully off-kilter cast includes Matthew Maher, Colleen Werthmann, and Quincy Tyler Bernstine) allay their dread by synopsizing episodes of "The Simpsons".
She neatly synopsizes the spectacular action.
It has set itself apart from the stalwarts by synopsizing the expected canon, like Camus's "The Stranger" and Shakespeare's "Hamlet," as well as by analyzing more contemporary and popular culture works.
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