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5 definitions found
From:
DICT.TW English-Chinese Dictionary 英漢字典
art
/ˈɑrt/
U藝術,美術;U技術,技藝;C學科
From:
Network Terminology
art
藝術
From:
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
Art
n.
1.
The
employment
of
means
to
accomplish
some
desired
end
;
the
adaptation
of
things
in
the
natural
world
to
the
uses
of
life
;
the
application
of
knowledge
or
power
to
practical
purposes
.
Blest
with
each
grace
of
nature
and
of
art
.
--
Pope
.
2.
A
system
of
rules
serving
to
facilitate
the
performance
of
certain
actions
;
a
system
of
principles
and
rules
for
attaining
a
desired
end
;
method
of
doing
well
some
special
work
; --
often
contradistinguished
from
science
or
speculative
principles
;
as
,
the
art
of
building
or
engraving
;
the
art
of
war
;
the
art
of
navigation
.
Science
is
systematized
knowledge
. . .
Art
is
knowledge
made
efficient
by
skill
.
--
J
.
F
.
Genung
.
3.
The
systematic
application
of
knowledge
or
skill
in
effecting
a
desired
result
.
Also
,
an
occupation
or
business
requiring
such
knowledge
or
skill
.
The
fishermen
can't
employ
their
art
with
so
much
success
in
so
troubled
a
sea
.
--
Addison
.
4.
The
application
of
skill
to
the
production
of
the
beautiful
by
imitation
or
design
,
or
an
occupation
in
which
skill
is
so
employed
,
as
in
painting
and
sculpture
;
one
of
the
fine
arts
;
as
,
he
prefers
art
to
literature
.
5.
pl.
Those
branches
of
learning
which
are
taught
in
the
academical
course
of
colleges
;
as
,
master
of
arts
.
In
fearless
youth
we
tempt
the
heights
of
arts
.
--
Pope
.
Four
years
spent
in
the
arts
(
as
they
are
called
in
colleges
)
is
,
perhaps
,
laying
too
laborious
a
foundation
.
--
Goldsmith
.
6.
Learning
;
study
;
applied
knowledge
,
science
,
or
letters
. [
Archaic
]
So
vast
is
art
,
so
narrow
human
wit
.
--
Pope
.
7.
Skill
,
dexterity
,
or
the
power
of
performing
certain
actions
,
acquired
by
experience
,
study
,
or
observation
;
knack
;
as
,
a
man
has
the
art
of
managing
his
business
to
advantage
.
8.
Skillful
plan
;
device
.
They
employed
every
art
to
soothe
. . .
the
discontented
warriors
.
--
Macaulay
.
9.
Cunning
;
artifice
;
craft
.
Madam
,
I
swear
I
use
no
art
at
all
.
--
Shak
.
Animals
practice
art
when
opposed
to
their
superiors
in
strength
.
--
Crabb
.
10.
The
black
art
;
magic
. [
Obs
.]
Art and part
Scots Law
,
share
or
concern
by
aiding
and
abetting
a
criminal
in
the
perpetration
of
a
crime
,
whether
by
advice
or
by
assistance
in
the
execution
;
complicity
.
Note:
☞
The
arts
are
divided
into
various
classes
.
The useful arts
,
The mechanical arts
,
or
The industrial arts
are
those
in
which
the
hands
and
body
are
more
concerned
than
the
mind
;
as
in
making
clothes
and
utensils
.
These
are
called
trades
.
The fine arts
are
those
which
have
primarily
to
do
with
imagination
and
taste
,
and
are
applied
to
the
production
of
what
is
beautiful
.
They
include
poetry
,
music
,
painting
,
engraving
,
sculpture
,
and
architecture
;
but
the
term
is
often
confined
to
painting
,
sculpture
,
and
architecture
.
The liberal arts
(
artes
liberales
,
the
higher
arts
,
which
,
among
the
Romans
,
only
freemen
were
permitted
to
pursue
)
were
,
in
the
Middle
Ages
,
these
seven
branches
of
learning
, --
grammar
,
logic
,
rhetoric
,
arithmetic
,
geometry
,
music
,
and
astronomy
.
In
modern
times
the
liberal
arts
include
the
sciences
,
philosophy
,
history
,
etc
.,
which
compose
the
course
of
academical
or
collegiate
education
.
Hence
,
degrees
in
the
arts
;
master
and
bachelor
of
arts
.
In
America
,
literature
and
the
elegant
arts
must
grow
up
side
by
side
with
the
coarser
plants
of
daily
necessity
.
--
Irving
.
Syn:
--
Science
;
literature
;
aptitude
;
readiness
;
skill
;
dexterity
;
adroitness
;
contrivance
;
profession
;
business
;
trade
;
calling
;
cunning
;
artifice
;
duplicity
.
See
Science
.
◄
►
From:
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
Art
The
second
person
singular
,
indicative
mode
,
present
tense
,
of
the
substantive
verb
Be
;
but
formed
after
the
analogy
of
the
plural
are
,
with
the
ending
-
t
,
as
in
thou
shal
t
, wil
t
,
orig
.
an
ending
of
the
second
person
sing
.
pret
.
Cf
.
Be
.
Now
used
only
in
solemn
or
poetical
style
.
From:
WordNet (r) 2.0
art
n
1:
the
products
of
human
creativity
;
works
of
art
collectively
;
"
an
art
exhibition
"; "
a
fine
collection
of
art
" [
syn
: {
fine
art
]
2:
the
creation
of
beautiful
or
significant
things
; "
art
does
not
need
to
be
innovative
to
be
good
"; "
I
was
never
any
good
at
art
"; "
he
said
that
architecture
is
the
art
of
wasting
space
beautifully
" [
syn
:
artistic creation
, {
artistic
production
]
3:
a
superior
skill
that
you
can
learn
by
study
and
practice
and
observation
; "
the
art
of
conversation
"; "
it's
quite
an
art
" [
syn
:
artistry
,
prowess
]
4:
photographs
or
other
visual
representations
in
a
printed
publication
; "
the
publisher
was
responsible
for
all
the
artwork
in
the
book
" [
syn
:
artwork
,
graphics
, {
nontextual
matter
]
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