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词汇 example_english_familiar-object
释义

familiar object

collocation in English

meanings of familiarand object


These words are often used together. Click on the links below to explore the meanings. Or, see other collocations with object.
familiar
adjective
uk /fəˈmɪl.i.ər/ us /fəˈmɪl.i.jɚ/
easy to recognize because of being seen, met, heard, ...
See more at familiar
object
noun
uk /ˈɒb.dʒɪkt/ us /ˈɑːb.dʒɪkt/
a thing that you can see or touch but that is not usually a living animal, plant, ...
See more at object


Examples of familiar object


These examples are from corpora and from sources on the web. Any opinions in the examples do not represent the opinion of the Cambridge Dictionary editors or of Cambridge University Press or its licensors.
The recognition of a familiarobject is a neural computation.
In both studies, children were not exposed to the familiarobject kinds until the disambiguation task.
That is, both monolingual and bilingual children were equally likely to select the familiarobject following its familiar name.
Each item consisted of a picture of a familiarobject on one page and six alternatives on a page below.
A second assumption relates to the number of words of a particular category applied to a single familiarobject.
Monolingual children were also more likely than bilingual children to reject a new name for a familiarobject.
In contrast, older monolingual and bilingual children were equally likely to select the familiarobject following its familiar name.
If the child named the novel object or failed to name the familiarobject, the set was replaced.
Here, the telephone is a unique and familiarobject (and hence it is marked with the definite determiner), but it is not specific.
On each of four trials, caregivers had to select one of two cards, both of which showed a familiarobject bearing an unfamiliar property.
In the third trial, the experimenter placed an unfamiliar object on the table, and a marker (familiarobject) inside the bucket.
The familiarobject carries a set of expectations and cultural signification which the artist often capitalises on, whereas a novel interfacial object requires explanation.
In the second trial, the experimenter placed a plate (familiarobject) on the table, and an unfamiliar object inside the bucket.
The order of object pre-exposure, unfamiliar and familiarobject pairing, and object test trial presentation and request were first randomized across children.
In this condition, the experimenter showed children pairs consisting of a visible familiarobject and an opaque bucket containing a novel object.
The only difference between the two versions of each new object was that one was perceptually more similar to the familiarobject than the other.
In this phase, the experimenter brought out a familiarobject, a novel object, and a bucket containing yet a different novel object.
In the first trial, the experimenter showed children the bucket, and placed a flower (a familiarobject) inside it as children watched.
Thus, the two versions of each new object were equally similar\\different to the corresponding familiarobject in terms of their taxonomic relatedness, functional similarity, and thematic association.
Half the sets consisted of pictures of an unfamiliar and a familiarobject, whereas the other half consisted of pictures of one unfamiliar and three familiar items.
The dustbin was used because it is a familiarobject of relatively standard proportions.
From the
Hansard archive

Example from the Hansard archive. Contains Parliamentary information licensed under the Open Parliament Licence v3.0
They are a familiarobject to the great majority of road users.
From the
Hansard archive

Example from the Hansard archive. Contains Parliamentary information licensed under the Open Parliament Licence v3.0
However, given that in the standard disambiguation context no obvious difference in meaning is provided, the two principles may motivate children to avoid a second label for a familiarobject.
We presented children with three objects on the word-mapping trials : one unfamiliar object that had been pre-exposed, a novel object that had not been pre-exposed, and a familiarobject.
These examples are from corpora and from sources on the web. Any opinions in the examples do not represent the opinion of the Cambridge Dictionary editors or of Cambridge University Press or its licensors.
Want to learn more?
Go to the definition of familiar
Go to the definition of object
See other collocations with object
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