词汇 | example_english_finely |
释义 | Examples of finelyThese 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. Eco-systems themselves are finely balanced in ways similar to fine artworks and architecture. In a finely tapered plasma channel, the phase velocity of the wakefield can equal the speed of light [11, 12]. However, these bars were finely made, tapered at one end, and had striations on their surfaces; several were coated with red pigment on their ends. At high magnification their surface texture is smooth to finely granulate. Further, we also computed from these finely resolved data the p. d. f. s for the concentration fluctuations and its gradients. The numbers are too small to make much of this classification nor can we break down the type of use more finely. The controller, itself, can be tested, validated and finely tuned through simulation before implementation. The flowing syncopated syntax reaches several unusual, finely coordinated tuttis, points of intensity and climax, which then lead into new paths, new combinations. The contents of the buccal cavity comprise a mixture of finely homogenized and non-homogenized particles. Secondly, with regard to accommodation processes in oral testing, the two teachers did not finely tune their vocabulary diversity to the proficiency of individual students. The teeth are typically of crushing type with a finely punctuated occlusal face. The orange-brown material is assumed to be finely divided limonite. The ostracod valves recovered have been replaced by finely to coarsely crystalline silica, which has preserved the original morphology and in some cases the ornament. The finely woven mesh bags allowed the transfer of water and solutes, but contained the seeds. More finely grained analyses of the specific contribution of individual interactional features need to be carried out. Prepubertal ovarian function is finely regulated by direct adrenergic influences: role of a noradrenergic innervation. The finely graduated degrees of light cast over the face of the moon also serve to reveal the heights and depths of its surface. His own local research, though, while sometimes finely observed in telling details, was often quite superficial, even sloppy. The method provides a very good accuracy for resolving finely the spatial structures of the flow but is rather costly for unsteady simulations. Internally, initial sediments are finely laminated silts/mudstones containing compressed plant remains. The lithology of the sediment is also fairly unusual in comprising clasts of finely laminated grey limestone. To act otherwise would upset the finely drawn distinctions between state and parent-mediated decisionmaking for children that occur in practice. Frons and vertex densely covered with white, decumbent setae; densely but finely punctate. Altogether, this is another faultlessly produced, finely illustrated and informative volume. Head and thorax with white pubescence, finely punctate ; front part of mesonotum slightly wrinkled. While ambiguity suffices for that, it is unnecessary since mental representations or concepts are cut more finely than are word meanings. Rather, a more finely articulated approach is needed. Though these finely coordinated displays are fleeting at this point in the story, such collaborations escalate as the story continues. In comparison to the finely strung artifice of the other songs discussed, this song adheres to a rhetoric of natural, direct expression. The perception of the audio-author changes the soundscape - which is a net of finely tuned vibrations melting into life experience. Most of all, the work is finely tuned historically. The justification for doing this is that party programmes are carefully considered and finely honed documents, so no sentence appears in them without a purpose. To treat something as a fine-grained or fragile action is similar to treating it as a finely individuated token of a certain action-type. Nevertheless, he is also writing for experts, with finely honed specialist knowledge in a range of fields, including philosophy as well as musicology. When clinopyroxene is the host, the intergrowth tends to be finely lamellar. The trackways are preserved on bedding planes of finely laminated planar and rippled siltstones. The finely laminated sediments represent standing water bodies (ponds, small lakes) on the floodplain. Recovered palynomorphs are scarce and, in most instances, occur together with abundant finely dispersed organic matter. First, the learning process could be much more finely specified. Not only the aristocracy promoted and recognized the virtues of a finely turned phrase. The book is finely illustrated with the author's own colour photographs, and is provided with adequate maps. The finely modulated photovoltage arriving at the cone synaptic terminal is next represented by modulating a stochastic stream of transmitter quanta. In the last decade, historians have produced finely textured portrayals of emergent sensibilities and subjectivities forged over the first half of the twentieth century. Most obviously, our hearing must be finely tuned and responsive to nuances of pitch, rhythm and timbre. Ideally this should lead to more finely crafted building, but this is not always the case. In response to this argument, a defender of revealed-preference theory might note that individuating objects of choice too finely renders all principles of rationality empty. At planting, the seeds were mixed with finely sieved sand in the ratio of 1:99 (seed:sand) by weight. How variable operant behavior is depends on how finely we analyze behaviors. Experiments on more finely grained media are wanted. On frontal glabellar lobe and frontal area, ridges finely woven to produce reticulate sculpture. The organic matter represents algae living in the lake and some finely disseminated fish remnants. Finally, we excluded finely age-stratified models [16, 47] which we could not accommodate owing to the limitations of our data. Are there independent mechanisms, finely balanced and regulated, that produce male or female gametocytes ? The conclusion is that the case for some extension of private finance is finely balanced. Therefore, as already said, there may be wide differences and variety in how finely their information sets are partitioned in the space of action profiles. There are occasional argillaceous partings rich in finely divided plant fragments. However, as with most computational processes, it is useful to decompose this task into a number of more finely characterised substeps. Second, parents had to coordinate each other's work commitments to a finely tuned level in the mornings, lunchtimes and evenings. The most finely grained test split the system-generated list of terms into three sections (top, middle, bottom). In this work, a finely-tuned analysis of the acquisition of one feature is attempted. The optimal adoption pace is then finely described in connection with the latter aspects. Thus, the setup can be used perfectly to finely investigate the determinants of adoption delays. More focused and finely grained studies (with more participants) are necessary. Major remnant forest blocks (forest reserves, national parks and game production reserves) are finely stippled. Lipid droplets in matured oocytes featured finely marbled or partially saturated figures, with an associated homogeneous area. Sporozoites elongate and banana-shaped, finely granulated, each with 1 large oval refractile globule and barely visible nucleus. The exospore layer was thinner, the endospore was less transparent, the spore interior looked finely granular. In pairwise additive-force models the barrier from entropy loss nearly uniformly compensates for binding energy : these terms are very finely balanced. The diversity of neurotransmitter receptors and signaling pathways in retinal neurons allows for vastly different but finely tuned responses specific to individual cell types. The inflow of calcium is counterbalanced by finely tuned removal (or clearance) mechanisms. Finely crystalline diagenetic chert and coarser siliceous cement has replaced much of the primary carbonate. The second, overlying unit is composed of white and pale grey, finely crystalline, sugary-textured, massive or weakly banded dolomite marbles. Inputbased grammar teaching involves focused, finely tuned input of one kind or another. Here we take a novel and more finely tuned approach. The immune response is a finely tuned system, efficiently orchestrated, in part by chemokines. The authors did not specify how finely the biopsy material was sectioned. The refinement criteria were chosen to produce a finely resolved shock and a reaction zone with at least 50 mesh cells per half-reaction length. The conclusions from this review are that the economic arguments are finely balanced and the evidence not overwhelming in either direction. The argument set forth here has been designed to demonstrate that the court performed a much more finely tuned balancing act than is generally recognized. In some places, thickly bedded, finely laminated siltstones and claystones exhibit preserved rootlets and mottling. Finely disseminated, variably weathered pyrite accounts for much of the difference in colour between outcrops. Finely's essay in fact deals very well with both the relatively few certain facts that are known about the event and the myths that have been built up around them. The point chisel is used roughly and then finely, followed by rough carving with the round-headed chisel and then finer carving with the same chisel. Usually, however, it is a tool with a flat or very finely toothed cutting edge. His sense of sacramental kingship produced a vision, probably not very finely tuned theologically, but of considerable import in shaping the direction of church policy. Secondly, in some species the choice is remarkably finely tuned so that under certain circumstances familiarity may be preferred over novelty. The administration of each territory was finely tuned and certain aspects of it were recorded on clay tablets at the urban centres. Such a nuanced distinction requires a continuous measure that returns very finely graded values. Median area of propodeum finely reticulate, plica more or less complete. Elsewhere, in the first movements of the trio and the sonata, their gradation of dynamic is often finely judged and is sometimes accompanied with rubato. On echocardiography, both great arteries were seen to arise from a leftward and posteriorly located, finely trabeculated ventricle. A cleverly constructed sentence, finely wrought witticism or deft turn of phrase needs nothing to clarify or punctuate. The landlords can gain possession only on finely specified grounds, and their rent level can be controlled. Finely stratified deposits are critical for this methodology. Thus, to support the internalization hypothesis, we have to witness the use of rules that are finely resolved and that reflect world knowledge. Scattering may be a problem unless the sample is very finely ground. 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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