Diorama in a sentence as a noun

I actually loved 3D/48FPS - I felt like I was watching a play in a large diorama.

Thank you for that wonderful diorama of sights of Japan.

The best place for that is in history museums, and dioramas are one of the best ways to bring them back to life.

I’ve mostly heard the term ‘diorama’ in the context of museum exhibits.

If I were still in middle school, I'd jam my ipad into a shoebox and turn it in as a diorama on American politics.

They're cold, clinical spaces that that exist in a sort of diorama dimension outside the jurisdiction and influence of the real world.

One of the more powerful exhibits is a diorama of the front line during WWI, showing trenches on either side of the no-mans-land.

Sorry, I was fully expecting to see a demonstration of a working hyperloop model at scale, not just a diorama.

I guess it's the perspective of the camera, or im not accustomed to the looks of prototype rockets, but to me it looks like a paper mache diorama

I'd also like to see labeled in the diorama the location of the infamous "grassy knoll" and the location Zapruder was filming from.

I'd want to rewrite the admission manual as well, with better categories than "miscellaneous land vehicle" and "diorama.

The ceremonies for the 1980 Moscow Olympics had no celebrities, but a diorama of the dozen Soviet cultures from the Ukraine to Kirghistan.

> "Instead of the romantic illusion of film, we see the sets and makeup for what they are. The effect is like stepping into a diorama alongside the actors, which is not as pleasant as it might sound Never bet against innovation, but this debut does not promise great things to come.

He never says you have to buy into his definition of success, and he doesn't seem to begrudge the people in his Japanese suburban diorama their definition of happiness.

Like I replied to someone else, what do you do about all those innocents who get killed in a driving accident with someone who's not drunk?That kind of ruins your simplistic little moral diorama, doesn't it?

While it limits the number of displays a museum can offer, I think it does show more respect and offers more depth to visitors:"For non-Makah visitors, it is a diorama in which the viewer doesn’t examine the Indian under glass, but takes her place.

Diorama definitions

noun

a picture (or series of pictures) representing a continuous scene

See also: panorama cyclorama