"Zoetropes" Pronounce,Meaning And Examples

"Zoetropes" Natural Recordings by Native Speakers

Zoetropes
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"Zoetropes" Meaning

A zoetrope is a device used to display sequences of pictures in a way that creates the illusion of movement. It consists of a rotating cylinder with slits cut out of it and a series of sequential images drawn or printed on the interior surface of the cylinder. As the cylinder is rotated, the images are viewed through the slits, creating a smooth motion.

The word "zoetrope" comes from the Greek words "zoe," meaning "life," and "tropos," meaning "turn."

"Zoetropes" Examples

Zoetropes in Literature


The inventor of the zoetrope used it to create a character named Pedaloo, who danced in a tipped hat in a vertically projected animation in "A Marvelous Game" (1877) by Lewis Carroll.
In Robert Louis Stevenson's "A Humorous Story" (1887), the protagonist travels to an imaginary carnival where he sees a device called a zoetrope.
The device is given a main focus in "Double Fates" (1892), a short story by Radclyffe Hall, to represent the struggle between the clocks.
Joel Schubel's novel "I, Watcher" (2003) uses a theater show mechanically dynamic writing-of-Sol the Observer, with commercially produced revivals like zoetropes, address rights changes.
In the novel "Father's Love" (2011) by Ji Mi, a young office worker tears the reading skills out of Chinese employers viewing at century-tested anthologies.

"Zoetropes" Similar Words

Zocor

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Zodiac

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Zodiacal

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Zodiacs

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Zoe

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Zoean

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Zoeas

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Zoetrope

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Zofran

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Zohar

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Zoidogamous

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Zoidogamy

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Zoilean

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Zoilos

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Zoilus

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Zoisia

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