词汇 | example_english_fore |
释义 | Examples of foreThese 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. Following are shown the range of intervention prices for sides, hinds and fores of beef. From the Hansard archive Example from the Hansard archive. Contains Parliamentary information licensed under the Open Parliament Licence v3.0 They cannot go far away and hunt down these small cruisers, quickly moving fore's which are attacking the trade routes. From the Hansard archive Example from the Hansard archive. Contains Parliamentary information licensed under the Open Parliament Licence v3.0 Even in official iconography the sexuality of the monarch was often thrust to the fore. Therefore, it was important in this study to keep patients' vulnerability to the fore. The disputes resulting from these actions brought to the fore the differences in claims being made over the irrigation schemes. Now gender rather than generational differences between rural and urban populations are coming to the fore. A significant positive correlation between the length of fore femur and the number of scales was detected in all treatments (table 6). The researchers interact with their ' fore-meanings ' or assumptions. Syntactic constructions are not hyphenated or written as one word, just as they are not fore-stressed. In this figure the angle is measured from the fore stagnation point. However, the measured pressure distributions show some fore-and-aft asymmetry and the maximum thickness is slightly downwind of the half-chord point. At times, the vested interests of professional groups have come to the fore. The war brought financiers and industrialists to the fore for various reasons. Due to the challenging nature of the fore-mentioned control design problem, many researches attacked it proposing different types of controllers. When the system of compulsory retirement was defended, four arguments came to the fore. In this paper, we consider building intelligent knowledgebased systems with maintainability well to the fore in our requirements for such systems. To bring to the fore a widely-known example, workers and kanganies accepted advances and subsequently did not meet their contractual obligations. In trying to explain these historical developments and phenomena, the conflicting strategies of planters and labourers (and officials) come to the fore. Intensifying public outrage and criticism of the drug industry have brought the debate over pharmaceutical prices and access to the fore. During the 19th century, a posteriori languages came to the fore and these usually took their word stock from already existing languages. Typically, his biologically instincts were to the fore with fishing. Data from one animal in the control group were deleted as the animal sustained a fracture of the fore leg not related to diet. As the university developed, individuals initially uninvolved in the project also came to the fore. If we relegate dynamics to the status of a mathematical means rather than an explanatory end, the issue of function is brought to the fore. In the late 1960s all these questions came to the fore. Nevertheless, by introducing the notion of emotionality later in the paper, the relation between emotional experience and emotion language is again brought to the fore. There was no talking - the music had come to the fore and was the only means of communication. Alternative practice, on the other hand, often brings these issues to the fore. Dictionaries are another area in which technology is coming to the fore. The theme to the fore is the renewal of the human soul, and the central doctrines concern the fall, original sin, and baptismal regeneration. After 40 years in which the monoaminergic hypothesis predominated, stress-responsive hormones have come to the fore in research on mood disorder. Although actual geography definitely does matter, still the images, visions, and representations are at the fore. The demand to democratize political, social and economic institutions almost always brings such conflict to the fore. Apart from partisanship and its underlying latent structure, we also assessed the possible impact of issues that were brought to the fore during the campaign. However, he insists that such divergences do obtain in easy cases as much as in hard cases, albeit without coming to the fore. One technical aspect of mapping that always comes to the fore, in my experience, is quantisation. The sudden upsurge in self-help activity, in particular unplanned selfhelp, brought to the fore the question of control. While evaluation of technological purpose has been left relatively implicit by most existing evaluation models (34;88), our model draws it into the fore. Our method of measuring eye-position can in principle confuse small rotations and large fore -aft movements of the globe. What comes to the fore is the minority status of these essentially oral languages that are usually branded as faulty or substandard. The beetles in the no-tillage plots were the best fed, with the greatest fore-gut biomass, but apparently the least capable of limiting slug numbers. Throughout the patterns of economic and social change are more to the fore than the history of conservationists. The scale bar (= 2 mm total length) relates to the fore leg, not to the enlarged scales. The following measurements were taken from both fore legs of each of these moths: length of femur, tibia, first tarsal segment and inner tibial seta. Palpi a bit less than one-third as long as proboscis, the latter as long as fore femora. Though compulsory labour was abolished in 1831, a military form of control over land and labour continued, while commercial interests came to the fore. Visual musical works often bring such referents to the fore and provide ideas for physical involvement. Note however that such inter pretations are only possible when the construction is fore-stressed. Other strategies were much more to the fore when it came to providing for younger children. Acting according to these principles will very often bring moral dilemmas to the fore rather than solve them. Here one can see the idea of excluding the heretic to the fore. The adequacy of the explanation depends, in some degree, on evidence coming to the fore that substantiates such responses. Interest in these plants is not new but developments since the 1960s have brought them to the fore. Likewise, pathway issues have come to the fore in the study of conduct problems. Earlier losses had come to the fore : she talked of the loss of her husband and two babies. There are two stagnation points on the nearer wall in the plane y = 0, one fore and one aft of the sphere. The membrane tension could then be derived directly from the fore-and-aft force on the supporting wedges. With clanship at the basis of the pre-kingship organization, the fact that all groups shared the same patriclans comes to the fore. Subjects that were otherwise forbidden could now be brought to the fore. Reading the memories, the question as to the relation of music, and sound, to individual experience came to the fore in unexpected ways. The vital perspective of performance comes to the fore in these essays - something to be welcomed in a discourse too often dominated by composers. Small changes to the preceding scene (the final scene of the first act) brought romance even more to the fore. The role of background culture came to the fore in the students' attempts to communicate with other students internationally. However, the flow no longer possesses any fore-aft symmetry. Tegument covered with scale-like spines arranged in regular rows, densely distributed in the fore-body becoming sparse posteriorly. Leading actors in each movement come to the fore, usually as actual or aspirant figures in electoral politics. In my view, each of these stages brought to the fore particular forms and patterns of violence. As the record has been gradually exposed by scholars, this latter aspect has been placed to the fore by more conservative analysts. However, once entrenched as a narrative marker, the correlation of be like with internal dialogue, always present, again comes to the fore. Physical capabilities, exercise and aging fore to decreased muscle bulk and strength. There fore, trees of heath forests appear to be sensitive to the local variation of several environmental factors. Also, the virtual plane is made between the fore and hind foot in the double support phase. The reform contingent on the committee made sure that their agenda was to the fore in public debate over the harbour issue. The latter are, however, potentially subject to diachronic lexicalization, which may moreover involve the adoption of fore-stress. Correlation coefficients between length of fore femur and number of scales were calculated for individuals fed on the different experimental diets. Marginal fringe of fore wing 0.68-0.75 times as long as wing width (fig. 51). Eternity is not something already given when emanation comes to the fore. We have tried to achieve this by bringing to the fore some of the multiplicity of texts and narratives drawn on by the people interviewed. The question that came to the fore was this: what part of women's bodies is an "ornament", and where should they cover? The latter debate was waged even more intensely when the issue of memory and history came to the fore in historical discourse in the 1980s. In this narrative what is fore-fronted is the historian's point of view, and not the state's, the elite's, the family's, or the self-satisfied locality's. Today, issues of access, inclusion and empowerment have come to the fore of the political agenda. Diplomacy was more to the fore in two other cases. At the same time new types of industry, demanding different locational requirements, were coming to the fore. Directly over this lower fore post stood an upper fore post. Here the relationship between exchange and religion really comes to the fore. More generally, the work brings code-switching to the fore. Here the relationship between physical effort, breathing, performance and learning process comes to the fore. In the 1930s, claims for economic security for a time came to the fore. The clauses dealing with the inheritance of future generations are frequently dropped, while more immediate concerns come to the fore. In the future, hypothesis-free approaches such as genome-wide association studies will come to the fore. Male bears fight by striking with their fore paws while standing erect on their hind legs. According to this view, selection came to the fore and lost its role of being just a (secondary) consequence of (primary) capacity limitations. Hence, it will remain important for us to keep concerns for justice in the allocation of resources at the fore of public discussions. However, the prospect of state endorsement brought to the fore critical issues inherent in the phonetization movement that had not been clearly defined before. 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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