dramatize
IPA: drˈɑmʌtaɪz
verb
- to adapt a literary work so that it can be performed in the theatre, or on radio or television
- to present something in a dramatic or melodramatic manner
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Examples of "dramatize" in Sentences
- The people dramatized the play.
- They tried to dramatized the dictatorship.
- It helps to personalizie and dramatize the moment.
- Medvedev said he would not "dramatize" troubled ties between Russia and NATO and said NATO needs Russia more than Russia needs NATO.
- Medvedev said he would not "dramatize" troubled ties between Russia and NATO, and warned that NATO needs Russia more than Russia needs NATO.
- We tend to dramatize teenage sexuality through the assumption that young people are unable to exercise control over their urges and interactions.
- But when we dramatize teenage sexuality by focusing only on its risks, we don't give young people the tools to mature into sexually and emotionally healthy adults.
- I can understand dramatizing/fictionalizing a movie about the Revolutionary War, but when we have actual footage and actual people who survived, why on earth would you need to/want to "dramatize" it?
- Without a single exception, all hindi news channels are telecasting crime bulletins in which they "dramatize" (see their creativity!) some crime-based theme and teach criminals how to commit crimes in a new way!
- "On Facebook" is a clever conceit by Doug Wright, who used the thread of an online argument about gay marriage to create his work, though unfortunately it's not lengthy or vivid enough to do more than document, as opposed to dramatize.
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