词汇 | example_english_fare |
释义 | Examples of fareThese 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 candidate that fares best is the winner. Second, the government also retained the power to set fares. Relates to railroads, street railways, subways, streetcars, and fares; includes bills regulating automobile operation and driving. Compared to most of their urban counterparts, whose real incomes plummeted, farmers fared well. Workers who begin careers in the highest earnings quartile fared worse with the dynamic wage model. The crucial issue for any theory is not how it fares in bivariate relationships but how well it performs when tested against rival theoretical frameworks. The results show that a new hire fares better under the hybrid all the way until age 55. Also, it remains to be seen how this approach fares in more detailed analyses of works. In my own assessment, which is informed by analysis of media coverage of the implementation, this does not seem to have fared well. In the circumstances, it was remarkable how well the opera fared. Another major focus of attention has been public transport services and the availability of free travel and concessionary fares for pensioners. We do not compare human judgment with the laws of logic or probability, but rather examine how it fares in real-world environments. They found that the adopted children fared much better. Linguists have sought such theories for the last 150 years with no success, and grammaticalization theory fares no better. A bisyllabic parse fares even worse, since it forces a mixing of iambic and trochaic feet within the same line. More importantly, how has it fared in the long run? We also examined the extent to which these characteristics of relatives predicted how patients fared clinically over the course of a 9month follow-up period. On the other hand, migrants fared much better with regard to family benefits and social assistance, receiving higher payments than citizens. Such services could include home care, travel fares, mobile phones or pagers so carers can stay in touch with the care recipient. As anticipated, the supine nominalization fares (slightly) better. I have the long-standing hope that you are faring well, and advancing in the prosperity of days, and interceding for me. The discussion looks at how music fared in comparison to students' con®dence in other arts subjects and seeks to identify factors that in-uence this. In conjunction with this a reduction in ferry fares should be arranged. Economically, however, both adolescent-onset men and women were not faring well. If only those who died had sought admission to a hospital, how would different age groups have fared in securing care ? Long-run economic forecasts have generally fared quite poorly. The urban-black households fared better than rural-black households in many respects but were vulnerable to impoverishment. The goal of this study is to examine patterns of welfare receipt and poverty across a 4-year period to explore how children fared. Following conventions, we asked for evaluations of how the system is performing in general (sociotropic judgements) and specifically how the respondent was faring (egocentric judgements). In the veto-ridden/decentralized regimes, by contrast, large-scale structural reforms have fared poorly. Underlying these figures are a number of factors which help to explain why some have fared better than others. The provision of better out-of-school services and concessionary transport fares are also on her agenda. I have reviewed three contemporary ontologies to see how pantheism fares with respect to each. How well they have fared is not apparent to the casual (or even not-socasual) observer of the organic sector. I will leave that task to others, however, and turn to the question of how escapism fares with respect to the problem of religious luck. How they fared is a matter of some ambivalence. The control group, on the other hand, fared better with the self-portrait than with the other two drawings. The musical repertoire used in the religious ceremonies has fared better than its courtly counterpart. He did not make a fortune, but he probably fared better financially than if he had stayed in his modest civil service post. Within a brief review, it is only possible to look at how this statement fares in the broadest sense. Reduced transatlantic fares and remittances from friends and relatives enabled increasing numbers of women to leave over the latter half of the nineteenth century. Other newly introduced subjects, such as science, had not fared as well, and needed more input. Unfortunately, though, attempts to find an alternative set of core, defining features have not fared well. In these respects, it fares at least as well as the more usual view of open theism. In the modern period, since the advent of direct elections, contestees have fared exceedingly well, winning 85.7 percent of contested elections cases. When trains carried a mail car, this unit usually fared the worst in the wreck. Subjects using buses, railways, or taxis incurred the costs of their fares, as reported in their returned questionnaires. As we illustrated, a person's complaint depends on how she fares in comparison to other alternatives. Recently we followed up the cohort at age 26 years, and here we describe how the two groups of males fared in adulthood. In the first few decades of industrialization, female-headed households fared reasonably well compared with households headed by men in some occupations. The glove controller fared most poorly in this study. First, that it was triggered by the student protests against the increase of transport fares during the first morning in several places throughout the country. Vocal music, because it was bolstered by a text that affirmed the music's meaning and intellectual content, fared better than instrumental music. Though not technically company servants nor, strictly, sold on arrival, few if any of these women paid their own fares ; thus they were hardly to be distinguished from servants. The rich hardly fared better. The best-interest-of-the-employee test fares no better here. The results of these simulations indicated that the target-long-words strategy fit the landing-site distributions better than the other strategies, while the language-based strategies fared rather poorly overall. Women fared as badly and worse. They appreciated free bus-passes or discounted fares for older people, so that they could travel without worrying about being able to afford to reach certain places. The paper focuses on three fields of statutory regulation : early retirement, concessionary public transport fares, and the different care entitlements of people with disabilities and of older people. Since at least some of the city's manufacturers have expressed a preference for the latter, it will be interesting to see how the new approach fares. One especially noteworthy feature of this study is that, drawing on actual cases, it treats the role of married women and how they fared in these matters. Perversely, the trend towards medium and larger sized homes faring better under new policy conditions, appears to conflict with the spirit of care in the community. In this case, it also began with protests by students against the increase in student fares, and was followed by protests from public transport users in general. The catchers fared even worse. I have also argued that the hopeful view fares at least as well as the more usual understanding of open theism in comparisons with more traditional views of providence. Perhaps the choice theory fares better when it argues that blameworthiness (and so punishability) depends on the defendant's having had a fair opportunity to exercise his capacity for choice. Political par ties fared better at the polls in the 1950s than in the 1990s, but this should not be attributed to the strength of opposition par ties. A precise analogy is like trying to control the output of motor cars by altering the incomes of potential purchasers and manipulating rail and air fares. Subsequent attempts at democratisation fared little better. He thinks that there is something good about saints faring better than sinners, even if this entails that saints will have more than they deserve in absolute terms. Tenants and sharecroppers fared less well. Furthermore, the children whose parents were in the groups fared better than children of controls in adapting to kindergarten and first grade (higher academic achievement, less aggression and depression). Findings also showed, surprisingly, that among girls, those who felt that their parents were highly committed to them fared better academically at low levels of containment for delinquency. Despite this crossover, the patient receiving temzolomide as part of an initial combined modality therapy fared much better than sparing the chemotherapy for the recurrent situation. A more recent study found that a multislider sometimes fared better than a bank of sliders with multiple selection, even when subjects could not verbalise how the multislider worked. Rational choice theories fared no better ; they were unable to explain the lengthy postponement of adjustment in crisis situations and then the sudden decision of governments to finally impose it. A nascent woodwind melody fares no better. My music fares best with people who do not think like narrow 'specialists', but who have a broad grasp of the full range of their instrument's repertoire. Indeed, exogenous-defensive frames have displayed relatively little victimisation of welfare dependants as being fraud-prone or lazy - although second-tier social assistance recipients have, as elsewhere, fared worse. The formative era of electroacoustic music during the 1940s and 1950s fares little better. She also examines how her patients have fared, compared with similar patients treated by others in her group practice, and shares the information with the patient. Sparsity of population is also associated with a range of other factors : longer travel distances to necessary services ; higher fares on public transport and less likelihood of concessionary fares. Thus, homeless boys fared worse than squatters, but much better than villagers in terms of pathogen exposure. On externalizing indices, females reported higher substance use and teacher-reported inattentiveness than males, yet fared better than males on delinquency and school grades. Observers saw unresolved women as faring worse in their relationships, but questionnaires did not detect these differences. On the other hand, subsidized bus fares seem to have very low effectiveness according to our analysis. The question is whether the former could succeed in maintaining stem family forms, and how the latter group fared. How are doctors faring, and what are the pressures on them? Even with discounted bus fares for retired people, some respondents said they could not afford the expensive fares for short distances. The strained care-givers fared better than both non-caregivers and unstrained care-givers, who showed increases in depressive symptoms. Moreover, one wonders how this account fares with other categories of presupposition. In fact, many ballet-pantomimes fared better than the operas with which they were performed. Even so, cotton, which is a low residue-producing crop, fared well in this study. Moreover, a more liberal approach to fares has been established, with the removal of all restrictions on low fares. I shall argue that the constitution view fares better than its competitors in fulfilling that task. Indeed, belladonna had fared much better in medieval times as its proximity to ruins indicates. 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. |
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