modern novin (#) Fr.: moderne 1) Relating or belonging to present and recent time.
→ modern physics. From M.Fr. moderne, from L.L. modernus, from L. modo "lately, just now," from modo "to the measure," ablative of modus "manner, measure," → mode. Novin, from now, → new, + -in adj. suffix, as in dirin, pasin, barin, kehin, mehin, behin, zirin, zabarin, pâyin, bâlâyin. |
modern physics fizik-e novin (#) Fr.: physique moderne The physics developed since about 1900, which includes Einstein's → relativity theory and → quantum mechanics, as distinguished from → classical physics. Much of modern physics is concerned with the behavior of matter and energy under extreme conditions or on the very small scale. |
modernism novingerâyi Fr.: modernisme 1) Modern spirit or character. |
modernist novingerâ Fr.: moderniste 1) An admirer of modern ideas, ways, etc. |
modernity novini (#) Fr.: modernité 1) The quality of being → modern. |
modernization novineš (#) Fr.: modernisation 1) The act of modernizing; the state of being modernized; something modernized. |
modernize novinidan (#) Fr.: moderniser To bring something up to modern standards, or adapt it to modern style, conditions, etc. |
postmodernism pasâ-novingerâyi Fr.: post-modernisme Any of a number of trends or styles in architecture, philosophy, literature, and art developed in the latter part of the 20th century often in reaction to → modernism. In philosophy, postmodernists claim that value systems are concoctions of human partial knowledge rather than systems reflecting universal objective truth. The most influential early postmodern philosophers include Jean Baudrillard, Jean-François Lyotard, and Jacques Derrida. The term postmodernism was first coined by architects to designate an architectural response against the earlier Bauhaus style, which was characterized by box-like apartment buildings, the absence of ornamentation and harmony between the function of a building and its design; → post- + → modernism. |