词汇 | example_english_matter-of-taste |
释义 | matter of tastecollocation in Englishmeanings of matterand tasteThese words are often used together. Click on the links below to explore the meanings. Or, see other collocations with taste. matter noun uk /ˈmæt.ər/ us /ˈmæt̬.ɚ/ a situation or subject that is being dealt with ... See more at matter taste noun uk /teɪst/ us /teɪst/ the flavour of something, or the ability of a person or animal to recognize ... See more at taste Examples of matter of tasteThese 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. We would also claim that language is inherently interesting, but this is ultimately a matteroftaste. It is a matteroftaste, not principle, whether system-makers are taken to be the best or the worst of the group. It is often a matteroftaste whether freshness forbids bound names as well. In part, of course, it is a matteroftaste. Of course, what to include is much a matteroftaste, but at times one is puzzled. Also, that ethics have been considered to be a matteroftaste and beyond scientific methodology. To say that it became a matteroftaste is not in any way to belittle it. What one sank (1911), surrounded (1901), or oiled up (1898) with was a matteroftaste. Generally speaking, the choice is matteroftaste. Is the definition of selection ultimately a matteroftaste or semantics, with one answer being as good as another? But this is a matteroftaste, no doubt. He discusses how in fact ethics are not a matteroftaste, but have a necessary evolutionary adaptive function. The choice of syntax is a matteroftaste, since the two representations are semantically equivalent. Yet, although scientific controversies have no decision procedure, they are not just a matteroftaste or arbitrariness. It is, however, a matteroftaste whether the end is uglier than the extra parentheses. The brands that we choose to buy are partly a subjective matteroftaste. From a mathematical point of view, these two approaches are equivalent and it is just a matteroftaste which one to follow. It is available in new ways, for new kinds of public as a matteroftaste. As music was freed from the domain of tradition it began to emerge for the first time as music (music in itself), and as a matteroftaste. 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. Want to learn more? Go to the definition of matter Go to the definition of taste See other collocations with taste |
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