stereoscopic
/ˌsteriəˈskɒpɪk/ (bre, ipa) · /ˌsteriəˈskɑːpɪk/ (ame, ipa) · /ˌster-ē-ə-ˈskä-pik ˌstir-/ (ame, mw)
stereoscopic — adjective
- stereoscopicpositive
- more stereoscopiccomparative
- most stereoscopicsuperlative
1. used for pictures, films, or devices that make what you see seem deep and solid,
used for pictures, films, or devices that make what you see seem deep and solid, not flat.
The science museum showed a stereoscopic film about coral reefs.
collocation: stereoscopic film
Jisoo put on stereoscopic glasses before the space documentary started.
collocation: stereoscopic glasses
The old viewer turned two flat photos into one stereoscopic image.
At the trade fair, Joaquín tested a stereoscopic camera beside the robot arm.
Reema preferred the stereoscopic view because the cave walls looked real.
- 3D
more common and informal in everyday talk about films, games, and displays
- three-dimensional
broader; can describe shape in general, not only an image effect
- immersive
focuses on the overall experience rather than the visual depth technology itself
- lifelike
describes a realistic result, but not necessarily the stereoscopic method
- flat
describes images that do not give a depth effect
- two-dimensional
technical opposite for images that show height and width only
文法句型
stereoscopic + film/image/view
stereoscopic + glasses/camera
用法筆記
Usually comes before nouns such as film, glasses, image, camera, and view. Use it for visual depth effects, not for sound or other non-visual features.