词汇 | example_english_hunter |
释义 | Examples of hunterThese 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. Also, listening to the oral descriptions of elders and hunters provides added context and important dimensions of expression to the selected quotations. Good, hardworking hunters may be getting relatively smaller portions, but they keep them from quantities that are absolutely larger. Among reindeer-herders, hunters and some others, rates ranged from 50 -70 per thousand. The early microbe hunters knew this, and they took the task of cash-out seriously. Certainly, if any of the other hunters made contributions to knowledge, they have been completely forgotten. Parttime hunters are more vulnerable to changes in the animal numbers and accessibility, particularly seal. Their aim was to check the coastline and huts along it to discover if local hunters haed news of the expedition. The second author guided these trips, during in which other elders and hunters were met occasionally. They would try to make the area nice for the hunters so that people could get food. The hunters had suddenly become the hunted and soon the vanquished. Property in the age of hunters existed in only a very limited, and transient sense. From here the hunters could take caribou when they forded the wetlands between eskers. They might be nomads living off animals in the grasslands, mountain peoples practicing swidden agriculture, or fishermen and hunters in forest and maritime environments. Although this correlation was not highly significant, these families were more critical of the health clinic in town than were non-duck hunters (.01). Similarly, several regional lakes are empty of fish, and village hunters repeatedly bemoan having to travel longer and further each year in search of game. Identification of crickets on an individual basis is influenced only by the hunters' criterion of body size. Figure 4 assumes that the payoff for catching a hare is not affected by the number of hunters who try to catch one. There are moments when their closeness to their oral sources leads them to write absurdities (the hunters ' carried medicines ... to make them invisible ' [p. 87]). By comparison, when readers turn the page they see the terrible consequences of the hunter's cruel actions. The light has a projection that can be held between the hunter's teeth, freeing his hands when catching a cricket. Most of these were due to single infections in trappers, hunters and animal handlers due to contact with infected wild animals. In the collective hunt with nets (bokela bo botie), half of the hunters are 'husbands', while the other are 'wives'. As demonstrated in table 2, the hunters can be divided into two groups. Early hunters and foodgatherers, for example, used a system of nomenclature - albeit primitive - to describe the various kinds of plants they encountered. Females, especially if pregnant or nursing, are poor hunters. Because of jostling and injury by others as they flee, the animal fails to get up before hunters arrive to dispatch it. By the time of her death in 1562, nonconforming women, even deeply pious women, could attract the scorching gaze of the witch-hunters. While cricket hunters wish to sell crickets off as quickly as possible, many in fact are left unsold. The heavy battery is put in a bag and carried on the hunter's shoulder. Cricket hunters go out to sell the crickets early in the morning after finishing the sorting process. Currently, crickets are basically distributed through a channel that starts with cricket hunters, goes through cricket merchants and ends with cricket aficionados. Cricket hunters always carry this net and a tool for digging in places where crickets are likely to be. Though the pots are cheap to buy, some hunters prefer to use old coffee cups without handles. The different sample sizes reflected the frequency with which hunters brought different mammals to bushmeat markets. Other sources were interviews with elders and hunters, and letters sent by community members to representatives and committees. When the hunters catch up with them, the baboons imitate their gestures, then climb up into the trees and escape. The raven is known as acting as a scavenger, competing with and often outwitting the dogs and even the hunters. The dogs would be able to get to the bear quicker because by stopping to investigate it has allowed the hunters to get closer. Younger generations often do not perceive the risks that more experienced hunters do. On the other hand, scent hunters assume a motionless pose (pointing) at the time they sense the presence of the game. Also, since the hunters have volunteered to participate, they can expect that all hunters cooperate. From that time, in the counter-factual world, the days of the dinosaurs are numbered as the hunters spread north and south. The picture evokes images of investors pursuing gains in the market-or maybe, going back an epoch or two, of hunters pursuing their quarry. The subsistence hunters are therefore treated as a homogeneous group. In broad terms, contemporary subsistence hunters hunt in small gangs in the protected areas relatively close to their homes. Thus, as a by-product, the outcome can be a higher rate of offtake for the illegal hunters. However, in contrast to commercial hunters, subsistence hunters face relatively low prices as well as low costs of poaching. As crickets concentrate in certain areas, it is more efficient for hunters to know exactly where they are. As morning approaches, the hunters start focusing on large crickets. If, however, good crickets cannot be found locally, hunters will go to more distant villages. Considering that crickets are hunted in order to be sold, it might be thought that the hunters would extend their talents to the sales process. Accordingly, hunters pay no attention to these crickets, no matter how many there are. His research interests in general are palaeolithic archaeology, art and the anthropology of hunters and gatherers. The hunters walk along the edge of the field in search of any cricket that sings in the desired tone. The high returns that cooperating individuals receive from whale hunting are unattainable by solitary hunters. Meat acquisition and meat transfers can be used by hunters in a variety of ways. Good hunters also have more close kin living in camp, and for longer periods of time. Cricket hunters are familiar with the fact that crickets are nocturnal and that many of them tend to emerge between midnight and dawn. In contrast to commercial poachers, subsistence hunters have close historical, traditional and cultural ties to wildlife hunting. The fraction of hunters reporting a positive number of hunting trips differs between sub-groups of the sample. In this 'story', each member of a group of hunters has the choice of hunting stag or hare. None of this constitutes indisputable evidence that these hunters and gatherers used any material symbols, of any kind whatsoever. The hunters who do not go on hunting trips hunt closer to their homes and within the village area. Full time hunters, through their extensive experience, knowledge, and time availability are better equipped to cope with climate change. Unusual weather - rain in winter, extreme cold in spring - is dangerous because hunters are not prepared. They were worried about one of their hunters who had been away far too long. Similarly, ravens were known to be very helpful for polar bear hunters who could benefit from their deceiving capacities. Furthermore, these authors have highlighted the fact that production costs of the full-time wage-earners were five times higher than those of the full-time hunters. He could not prove which of the two negligent hunters had actually injured him and which had missed him. A special effort to gather data from active hunters may explain these characteristics of the sample. Since the crickets eventually become less active, hunters dispose of the ones that are unlikely to be sold whenever fresh crickets are obtained. In other words, crickets are simply commodities - hunters need have no further feelings towards them. There is, incidentally, an interesting parallel here, that the language-gene hunters might learn from. There are two agents in the model, an agency managing a national park (or game reserve) of fixed area, and a group of subsistence hunters. As great hunters, they are equally efficient destroyers of wildlife as well. At this point, then, the hunters stop wandering on their own and help each other in the hunt. Women became hunters, protectors of fields and took on men's agricultural tasks, such as field clearing and selection. In two direct interventions, the narrator insinuates that the knights who stay home pursue their quarry as successfully as the hunters. The ethnoveterinary handout was given to two hunters. The young men themselves are the most habitual hunters. Such 'histories' proposed three or four stages from 'savage' hunters, through 'barbarian' pastoralists and 'civilised' farmers, to the writer's contemporary commercial world. Clearly such information is essential for an assessment of the role of these northerly sites in the settlement system of magdalenian hunters and gatherers. The factor which cannot be without important consequences on the hunter's activities is the existence of sledges drawn by dogs. I was just trying to make the point that hunters and gatherers were variable. One group is constituted of hunters who go on hunting trips, usually into the protected area. The other group represents hunters who do not go on hunting trips, but instead hunt within the village area. Previously, the hunter's right to hunt was unquestioned. Even in the social stage of the hunters, initial possession does not seem to be the origin of property right. The difference though with cricket hunters is that they select large and good-quality crickets, not concentrating on size alone. Cricket hunters normally look for crickets in the vicinity of their own villages, where they have full knowledge of the crickets' habitat. Increasing colonial presence disrupted the seasonal mobility of indigenous hunters and herders. 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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