ความคิดเห็นที่ 3
You have to be naked (without any clothing) to be on a nude beach.
You only hear ;
Naked truth but never Nude truth
Nude artist but never Naked artist.
Nude contract but never Naked contract.
You can be naked but not nude.
http://www.phrases.org.uk/bulletin_board/13/messages/429.html
"Nude" being the state of having no clothes on, while "naked" is the state of having removed one's clothes
In a culture where people do not wear clothes (think really hot climate), an individual could be naked but not nude. Naked is innocent and natural. Nude is, well, lewd. OK, lewd is a value judgment. But a nude normally wears clothes. Now he/she wears them. Now he/she doesn't.
and vice versa
You can be nude but not naked.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/artanddesign/2006/feb/08/photography.art
Vanity bare ... February's cover of Vanity Fair taken by Annie Leibowitz. Photograph:
Vanity Fair, Keira Knightley and Scarlett Johansson photographed naked in bed on its cover. They're not naked, but nude.
http://www.answers.com/topic/nudity
Although "nude", "naked", "bare", "stripped", and other terms have the same objective meaning (i.e., not covered by clothing), they have differing subjective connotations, which partly match their differing etymologies. "Nude" originally had a meaning of "plain, bare, unadorned" in a broader sense when introduced into English from Latin nudus, originally only as a legal term meaning "unsupported by proof", since 1531; later used an artistic euphemism for physical nakedness in 1631. Meanwhile "bare" and "naked" derive from the common Old English words, with many cognates, for "uncovered". Some consider one term more appropriate than the other. The book Nude, Naked, Stripped suggests that these three terms define a continuum ranging from artistic or tasteful absence of clothing by choice, at one end, to a forced or mandatory condition of being without clothes (e.g., a strip search), at the other. In general, a "nude" person is unclad by choice and is generally shameless; a "naked" person is involuntarily caught undressed and is generally embarrassed.[original research?]
http://www.uexpress.com/coveringthecourts/index.html?uc_full_date=20061029
Merriam-Webster's first definition of "nude" evidently was drafted by a 90-year-old monk who worked from a carrel in Tibet. It reads: "lacking something essential to legal validity, e.g., a nude contract."
The workhorse word, of course, is plain-vanilla "naked." Remarkably, Bartlett's Quotations offers 49 citations of "naked" and not a single one of "nude." The most famous of these goes back to the Garden of Eden, where the first couple "were both naked and were not ashamed." Shakespeare lent the adjective to Richard III: "... And thus I clothe my naked villainy." Goya painted his "Naked Maja," a lady who might usefully have shed a few redundant pounds.
Manifestly, "naked" and "nude" are seldom interchangeable. It never would have occurred to Shakespeare to write about Richard's "nude" villainy. The line would not have scanned. References to the "nude truth" lose their sting. Writers learn such distinctions in their cradles. Moll Flanders was naked; Lady Godiva was nude.
http://www.goddessofwar.com/disclaimer.htm
Nude is powerful and emotional.....naked is vulnerability or solicitation.
จากคุณ :
genf
- [
27 ก.ค. 51 18:56:55
]
|
|
|