Advertisement
Advertisement
diorama
[ dahy-uh-ram-uh, -rah-muh ]
noun
- a scene, often in miniature, reproduced in three dimensions by placing objects, figures, etc., in front of a painted background.
- a life-size display representing a scene from nature, a historical event, or the like, using stuffed wildlife, wax figures, real objects, etc., in front of a painted or photographed background.
- a spectacular picture, partly translucent, for exhibition through an aperture, made more realistic by various illuminating devices.
- a building or room, often circular, for exhibiting such a scene or picture, especially as a continuous unit along or against the walls.
diorama
/ ˌdaɪəˈrɑːmə; ˌdaɪəˈræmɪk /
noun
- a miniature three-dimensional scene, in which models of figures are seen against a background
- a picture made up of illuminated translucent curtains, viewed through an aperture
- a museum display, as of an animal, of a specimen in its natural setting
- films a scene produced by the rearrangement of lighting effects
Discover More
Derived Forms
- dioramic, adjective
Discover More
Other Words From
- dio·ramic adjective
Discover More
Word History and Origins
Discover More
Word History and Origins
Origin of diorama1
Discover More
Example Sentences
At ground level: comically huge, flat-leafed plants that look like they come from a prehistoric diorama.
Across from this display is a clay diorama of a gas chamber in action.
Mrs. Darcy wants a circus-poster, or the canvas of a diorama.
It is an answer that rings down the curtain on the diorama called "Cruikshank the journalist."
Such was the Diorama as it was first exhibited in London to admiring crowds.
That building was intended for the exhibition of the Diorama.
For hundreds of miles, day after day, we were borne past a moving diorama of scenery unrivalled by anything here below.
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Browse