词汇 | example_english_matter |
释义 | Examples of matterThese 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. Second, liberalization does not necessarily imply the retreat of the state's role in matters of economic governance. The central committee was in charge of such key matters as sanitation and schools. All matters were discussed in public, from education, diet and dress to love marriages, divorce and sources of women's inferiority. More information on these matters is required to shed light on the older prisoner population as an important group of correctional health service recipients. Basically, their strategy consists of "physicalizing": redescribing matters such that aspects of color perception, apparently determined by physiological or cultural aspects, become "physical" properties. What it does require is an attempt to understand why such problems are so difficult, and what can be done to ameliorate matters. Such terminological discussions, in my view, are typically poorly motivated, add little to the inquiry, and confuse matters more than anything else. The amount of grain in his warehouse and the amount of grain 'owed' to the army were two entirely separate matters. We are being rudely awakened to a sense of unity in matters political, economic, scientific, and even cultural. A vakilu was an agent assigned to handle legal matters. We were not so much interested in mending fences as in focusing on the scientific matters of the debate. In this reply, we address both matters as they pertain to the issues raised in the commentaries. However, they introduced a new conceptual framework which was henceforth referred to on all matters of authority and identity at the settlement level. Throughout the project we placed priority on building a close rapport with one another and openly speaking about personal issues as well as professional matters. What matters is that she has been encouraged to create a musical event which has been received with interest and enthusiasm by the teacher. Twelve thought this mattered and twelve did not. What mattered was that others invested time and money to come and see a local object. By all accounts, the characters that are embodied in this performance archive do make an incredible case for why performance matters. In doing so, these households focus on matters of interest to the village, such as demonstrating that one is a successful farmer. Postmodernist cultural criticism is often relativistic by its very nature, so that it does not lead to an active engagement in cultural political matters. What matters is that the evidence is contextualized in terms of both the social status of the litigants and the period. They require conceding in advance a common empirical experience of the matters at hand. To say simply that doctors enjoy more success at collective bargaining because they are a historically professionalized group is to oversimplify matters somewhat. We still are unable to offer a scientifically based answer to queries raised about the nature of man in matters of social civility. Most of what matters are relations of degree. I am flattered that they took notice of my piece, but think their efforts to set the record straight only obfuscate matters further. There are scientific and secular frameworks within which to understand these matters. The second step is to comprehend what matters by better understanding the full range of values at work. In the directly occupied northern zone maintaining sovereignty in policing matters took on a different and much more negative form. In reality matters were not quite so simple. Such matters are essential, changing lives and material conditions. Nevertheless, the influenza threat does emphasize that knowledge is ethically neutral and the use to which it is put is what matters. We cannot decide in advance what really matters to people. At a time when fanciful prophecies about changing human nature abounded, those were understood to be obvious matters for analysis. Context matters to the very kinds of problems that people are likely to take very seriously. The conflict model also teaches (lesson three) that the law is the most practical guide to analyzing ethical matters. Such a status exempts citizens from the law of the land in matters that are of the greatest importance to them (typically, participation in combat). At best, matters are referred to committees, whose reports are shelved. The medical colleges and hospitals were rigidly controlled by the funding agency (state government or municipal corporation), which had the final say in all matters. At present, there is very little public discussion of such matters. Two matters must be considered at this early stage in the paper. All that mattered was moving in his own time, like the growing plants. Such matters, therefore, are the concerns of this paper. Consequently, for him the accounting office existed to channel his interest in financial matters. Because it was connected with sacred matters, it was placed out m of sight in the treasure repository of the shrine. The theories of assembly are then extrapolated to matters of architectural language, of form and then of function. On a larger scale, sympathetic partnership always mattered. Admittedly, however, the assays of these matters are crude in several respects. Stage 1 identified which of the general matters were crucial. On the one hand, they suggest that income matters for a happy life. Second, greater attention to social science on the part of governments will itself tend to improve matters. To the development economist, environmental matters, therefore, appeared a trifle precious, not wholly relevant to the urgencies of poor societies. However, it is interesting to note that the offsetting instrument matters for many of them. If language is a building, then usage conflicts are matters of surface finish - a shade of paint here, some plaster cracks there. Analysing them in these fresh perspectives, some matters that previously seemed puzzling may make better historical sense. If these matters are not introduced in school, then where do they come from? By contrast the occasional pamphlets represent a single performance and hence often specify such matters as instrumentation. When it comes to considering the broader implications of the study, two matters are of special interest. I also take this opportunity to bring up some additional matters. In addition, there is information on diseases and disorders, taxonomy of organisms, terminology, fungicides, biographical notes on past plant pathologists and many other relevant matters. The concerns of the farmer, ranging from technical day-to-day matters to more strategic issues, are presented sagaciously. What really matters is whether the resulting assessments are plausible. The extent to which this difference matters will depend on the specifics. The economics of science: methodology and epistemology as if economics really mattered. What matters, though, for such a claim, is the primary, not the secondary income distribution. What matters from this perspective is the overall pattern of the life, for instance, whether early hardships are linked to later success. What matters to them is the final tenure decision, not the underlying reasons; they are "outcome-oriented", as defined precisely later. In the controversy that followed, matters involving intellectual property and opera aesthetics were linked to revolutionary struggle. All that mattered was the honesty of the answer. Nevertheless, moral philosophy is immensely significant in practical matters. He has done us a great service by improving public decision-making in matters of life and death. Parfit (1991) says that the priority view departs from utilitarianism in exactly one way: it claims that benefiting the worse off matters more. Each has a short introduction dealing with historical and bibliographical matters, including accounts of earlier lists and catalogues. He says he was surrounded by people who honoured him, and who came to his house to seek information and advice on scholarly matters. What mattered to him was the establishment of his episcopal authority at the expense of that of the martyrs. What really matters is the material that lies between the covers. In treating other matters, he is forming opinions ; in treating religion, he is supporting notions and prejudices already formed. Moreover, by serving as a subject in his own experiment, an experimenter can check his intuition in such matters. Let us keep an open mind on these matters and see what facts emerge. To be fair, a great deal has been done recently to improve matters. No one is entirely right or entirely wrong, particularly where language matters are concerned. What matters regarding inferences about recombination is not the number of such sites per se, but the expected number of multiple hits. Private lives of public people mattered as much as their stands on the issues. Illuminating the documents are volume, chapter and source overviews, giving useful information on matters such as newspaper circulation numbers, censorship and reporting conditions. I have given particular attention in this section to two such matters - 'adjustment of the record' and 'selective amnesia'. The selectivity is of a piece with the selective amnesia we have met in eucharistic as in other matters. The language mattered so much precisely because it was under threat. To impose retrogressive restrictions on any section of society will not mend matters. Our information about such matters comes for the most part from three types of sources. I object as much to semitism in matters of mind as in matters of commerce. If progress is not made with these matters, violence may escalate or armed conflict may result. My own belief is that the two matters probably have a common provenance. History, for which analysis of function matters less than the change such function underwent, would have no place in such a timeless, static picture. What matters are the intensity of relations linking the different components of the whole and the extent of the ramifications. One of his ideas was right, and in the school of history practised here, that's what matters. What matters more is the poem's preoccupation with the city and its destruction. Conflicts, over such matters as land use, are likely to arise and need to be faced squarely. Why should it not, if there are grounds for thinking that it matters to the fiction? 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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