at close range
Học thuậtThân thiện
Definition
Adverb: At a very short distance; from a position very near to the target or subject.
Usage
The phrase "at close range" describes an action performed or an event occurring from a position that is physically very near. It is most commonly used to describe shooting, observation, or examination.
Examples
- The photographer captured the bird's intricate feathers at close range.
- The witness saw the suspect at close range and could provide a detailed description.
- Even firing at close range, the inexperienced soldier missed the target.
Advanced Usage
- Figurative Use: Can describe intense scrutiny or a very detailed, intimate perspective.
- The documentary examines the life of the artist at close range.
- Prepositional Phrase: Often follows verbs like "see," "observe," "examine," "fire," or "shoot."
Variants and Related Words
- Close-up (noun/adjective): A photograph or film shot taken at close range; showing great detail.
- The magazine featured a close-up of her face.
- Point-blank (adverb/adjective): (Of a shot, bullet, or remark) fired or delivered from very close to its target; direct and blunt.
- He refused point-blank to answer the question.
Synonyms
- From nearby
- Up close
- At point-blank range (specifically for shooting)
Antonyms
- From a distance
- From afar
- At long range
Adverb
- very close
- without my reading glasses I can hardly see things close up
- even firing at close range he missed