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Full-length   /fʊl-lɛŋkθ/   Listen
adjective
full-length  adj.  
1.
Accommodating the full height of the human figure; as, a full-length mirror.
2.
Representing the full height of the human figure; as, a full-length portrait.
3.
Unabridged; as, the full-length play. Opposite of abridged.
Synonyms: complete, uncut.






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Full-length" Quotes from Famous Books



... raised dais with red satin and gold couches and chairs, and mirrors and palms; above these, white walls, and the King's portrait in red and blue and framed in gold: and round the sides, under the pillars, are more full-length portraits of Governors and their wives, Lord Elphinstone, Lady Munro, The Marchioness of Tweedale, Wellesley, Napier, and Ettrick, Grant Duff, Connemara, and others. Excepting the King's they all looked rather dark against so much marble-white wall space. Overhead, I am told, there was ...
— From Edinburgh to India & Burmah • William G. Burn Murdoch

... most striking and beautiful thing in the room was a full-length, life-sized portrait of Mary herself, so arranged that a hidden lamp threw its soft light on the features; whilst the hanging velvet curtains of deep crimson on either side concealed the frame of the picture, and conveyed the illusion that a living woman was standing ...
— Seen and Unseen • E. Katharine Bates

... that the line of the horizon should be as nearly as possible on a level with the eye, as it is in nature; and yet one of the commonest mistakes in our exhibitions is the bad placing of this line. We see dozens of examples of it, where in full-length portraits and other large pictures intended to be seen from below, the horizon is placed high up in the canvas instead of low down; the consequence is that compositions so treated not only lose in grandeur and truth, but appear to be toppling over, or give the impression of smallness rather ...
— The Theory and Practice of Perspective • George Adolphus Storey

... the transept and the west front, flank the nave, each holding aloft an elegantly canopied niche containing a full-length winged figure, a further unique arrangement being a similar figure which caps or pinnacles the outer piers, from which the buttresses spring. Above the point of contact of the buttresses with the main body, runs an effective balustrade of small pointed arches, while the abside ...
— The Cathedrals of Northern France • Francis Miltoun

... the middle of the floor stood a circular sofa of the latest pattern, with chairs and settees to match, and at one end a foreign stove, in which a fire had been recently lighted for our coming. Against the wall were placed a full-length mirror, several brackets, and some fancy work. The most interesting of the ornaments in the room were portraits of Li-Hung-Chang himself, Krupp the gun-maker, Armstrong the ship-builder, and the immortal "Chinese Gordon," the ...
— Across Asia on a Bicycle • Thomas Gaskell Allen and William Lewis Sachtleben


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