Definition of Depicted object

1. Noun. Something (a person or object or scene) selected by an artist or photographer for graphic representation. "A moving picture of a train is more dramatic than a still picture of the same subject"

Exact synonyms: Content, Subject
Generic synonyms: Thing
Group relationships: Scene, View

Lexicographical Neighbors of Depicted Object

dephosphorization
dephosphorylate
dephosphorylated
dephosphorylates
dephosphorylating
dephosphorylation
dephosphorylations
dephysicalization
dephysicalize
dephysicalized
dephysicalizes
dephysicalizing
depict
depictable
depicted
depicted object (current term)
depicter
depicters
depicting
depiction
depictions
depictive
depictor
depictors
depicts
depicture
depictured
depictures
depicturing
depiece

Literary usage of Depicted object

Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:

1. Popular Science Monthly (1906)
"... the character of which corresponded to the depicted object only in a few main points. No attention was paid to the necessity of exact correspondence. ..."

2. Modern Painting, Its Tendency and Meaning by Willard Huntington Wright, S. S. Van Dine (1915)
"The moment a depicted object is recognised, the general pleasure in the arts increases; and the moment the accepted vision of the object is modified or ..."

3. Catalogue of the W.P. Wilstach Collection by William P. Wilstach, Carol H. Beck (1900)
"... owing to which the depicted object seems clothed with a profusion of light/'' Bassano treated religious subjects as though they were the familiar scenes ..."

4. Mr. & Mrs. Bancroft on and Off the Stage by Squire Bancroft, Marie Bancroft (1888)
"I am told that members of the class depicted object to Mr. Bancroft's delineation as a charge; but they forget that they are really the charges of society. ..."

5. The W.P. Wilstach Collection (1900)
"... reflected from one object to another, and in those happy counter positions, owing to which the depicted object seems clothed with a profusion of light. ..."

6. An Introduction to the Study of Poetry by Henry Bernard Cotterill (1882)
"In this the senses enable us to apprehend, and the understanding to classify, or comprehend, the depicted object. All that is merely imitative or delusive ..."

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