/dɹˈæmɐtˌaɪz/ - dram•a•tise
We found 6 definitions of dramatise from 4 different sources.
dramatise - /dɹˈæmɐtˌaɪz/
dramatize - /dɹɑˈmʌtajˌz/
Verb |
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dramatise - represent something in a dramatic manner; "These events dramatize the lack of social responsibility among today's youth" | ||
dramatize | ||
represent point out or draw attention to in protest or remonstrance; "our parents represented to us the need for more caution" | ||
overdramatise, overdramatize present in an overly dramatic manner; "She is overdramatizing her child's failure in the physics class" | ||
dramatise - put into dramatic form; "adopt a book for a screenplay" | ||
dramatize, adopt | ||
indite, pen, compose, write put together out of existing material; "compile a list" | ||
penning, authorship, writing, composition the act of initiating a new idea or theory or writing; "the authorship of the theory is disputed" | ||
dramatise - add details to | ||
embroider, pad, lard, embellish, aggrandize, aggrandise, blow up, dramatize | ||
hyperbolise, hyperbolize, overstate, exaggerate, overdraw, magnify, amplify to enlarge beyond bounds or the truth; "tended to romanticize and exaggerate this `gracious Old South' imagery" | ||
glorify bestow glory upon; "The victory over the enemy glorified the Republic" |