词汇 | example_english_notoriously |
释义 | Examples of notoriouslyThese 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. Good operational measures of, and data on, asset specificity are notoriously elusive. The scholar is compared favourably with that other notoriously frivolous and unproductive cultural figure, the poet. And the law notoriously sustains a fair amount non-meshing, pockets of anti-coordination, and so on, so the overall picture usually looks more modular than homogeneous. As noted below, 'social capital' has acquired a very different but notoriously contested meaning today. The issue of nationalism alone is notoriously difficult to define and understand. It is notoriously difficult to offer a coherent definition of "postmodernism" because of the myriad ways it has been used in the past sixty years. Identifying sentences in conversation is notoriously problematic, but it is interesting for it to be conclusively demonstrated that there is no difficulty in identifying clauses. For example, the copious amount of guidance that has accompanied community care legislation has been notoriously inconsistent and created problems for practitioners. Our current transformations do not attempt to fold simplified function definitions; indeed, folding is notoriously difficult to control in automatic transformation. It is notoriously difficult to say anything new about the nature of politics. A functional language provides a solid basis for reasoning about rules, an aspect that is notoriously difficult to accomplish with, for example, production systems. Unfortunately, stylistic analysis by itself is notoriously unreliable in deciding questions of authorship. He is a notoriously skilled interrogatee, adept at turning questions to his advantage while appearing to be dutifully responsive. The term 'political culture' is famously (or notoriously) problematic even within the camp of scholars who find the term useful. Other problems have been notoriously resistant to attack; these usually involve some unpredictable processing order of the elements. Areas that are notoriously ambiguous were given special attention when assigning diagnoses. Consequentialism, a simple theory, seems obviously right to many people; non-consequentialism, in contrast, is notoriously difficult to state clearly. Attitudes are notoriously more difficult to measure accurately than social status or simple demographic characteristics. None the less, intercultural communication often runs into the notoriously thorny problem of ethical relativism. First, at present, we have no good methods for identifying pragmatic difficulties, other than clinical opinion, which is notoriously subjective. Calculating whether actions will promote utility is notoriously complex and plagued by both uncertainty in predicting effects and subjectivity in evaluating utilities. Living tissue, as in the brain, is notoriously subject to deformation and the analysis of brain scans has to accept this complication. Although what we mean by the word often seems self-evident, time is notoriously difficult to define. 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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