0 present participle of dramatize --
1 When writers dramatize books, stories, poems, etc., they write them again in a form that can be performed. --
2 If someone dramatizes a report of what has happened to them, they make the story seem more exciting, important, or dangerous than it really is. --
Some look forward, dealing with innovation in the visual arts and philosophy; others look back, dramatizing neo-pagan themes.
The war privileged masculinity, dramatizing and exaggerating, father-son bonds.
Dramatizing many specific scenes in the report, it is a synthesis of multiple (and in some cases partisan) sources in addition to the report itself.
Playing outlaws, what they did in effect, was dramatizing the idea of freedom, expressing man's historic longing for it.
Rollup is the process of dramatizing a win by playing sounds while the meters count up to the amount that has been won.
His plays offered his contemporaries images of themselves, often dramatizing the lives, values, and conflicts of the emerging middle classes.
Oftentimes, adults pose questions or hypothetical situations to the children (sometimes dangerous) but in a teasing, playful manner, often dramatizing their responses.
They are often closely connected to his essays; expanding on and dramatizing their ideas.