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Từ điển Oxford Advanced Learner 8th
abstract
ab·stract AW [abstract abstracts abstracted abstracting] adjective, noun, verb adjective BrE [ˈæbstrækt] ; NAmE [ˈæbstrækt] 1. based on general ideas and not on any particular real person, thing or situation •abstract knowledge/principles •The research shows that pre-school children are capable of thinking in abstract terms. compare ↑concrete adj. (2) 2. existing in thought or as an idea but not having a physical reality •We may talk of beautiful things but beauty itself is abstract. 3. (of art)not representing people or things in a realistic way, but expressing the artist's ideas about them •the work of American abstract expressionists like Mark Rothko compare ↑figurative (2), ↑representational Word Origin: Middle English: from Latin abstractus, literally ‘drawn away’, past participle of abstrahere, from ab- ‘from’ + trahere ‘draw off’. Example Bank: •Abstract principles are no good in this particular situation. •All human beings are capable of thinking in abstract terms. •Freedom is more than a purely abstract notion. •Mathematics is an extremely abstract discipline. •Some of the ideas that their legal system is based on are incredibly abstract. Idiom: ↑in the abstract Derived Word: ↑abstractly noun BrE [ˈæbstrækt] ; NAmE [ˈæbstrækt] 1. an ↑abstract work of art •Kandinsky's first pure abstracts are marked by their wild colour. 2. a short piece of writing containing the main ideas in a document Syn: ↑summary Word Origin: Middle English: from Latin abstractus, literally ‘drawn away’, past participle of abstrahere, from ab- ‘from’ + trahere ‘draw off’. Example Bank: •Abstracts of about 300 words should be submittted to the conference committee who will decide which papers to accept. •This information is supplementary to the abstract of accounts. verb BrE [æbˈstrækt] ; NAmE [æbˈstrækt] 1. ~ sth (from sth) to remove sth from somewhere •She abstracted the main points from the argument. •a plan to abstract 8 million gallons of water from the river 2. ~ sth (technical)to make a written summary of a book, etc. Verb forms: Word Origin: Middle English: from Latin abstractus, literally ‘drawn away’, past participle of abstrahere, from ab- ‘from’ + trahere ‘draw off’. Example Bank: •Their plan is to abstract 8 million gallons of water from the river.
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