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词汇 example_english_pilot
释义

Examples of pilot


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.
He passed these instructions to the pilots that launched at 10:42 and afterward.
In another fragment this function of piloting all things is served by "the intelligence by which all things are steered through all things".
Each questionnaire was piloted twice, which improved the wording and relevance of the questions.
As a check on the difficulty levels of the two versions, they were piloted on the 20 learners mentioned earlier.
After piloting, the instrument was tested in a study in which subjects were assessed twice over 12 months by informants.
As with fighter pilots in time of war, the options were to learn fast or die.
I identified features of the pilots' talk that suggested the pilots had created an interactional context for human error.
Follow-up clinics that can be accessed when patients or carers choose to are worth piloting and evaluating.
The results of the query are automatically updated when the user changes the pilot's callsign in a spreadsheet cell.
The average salary per soldier is about $3,500 per month, with top helicopter pilots and country commanders earning about $7,500.
Unfortunately, there is a lack of definitive scientific data on which to base firm guidelines for pilots.
We piloted penultimate versions with 20 people to judge whether it was clear and unambiguous.
In addition to this general expertise, pilots need information on the routes they could follow, and weather reports.
To meet their objectives, sales managers, unlike pilots, can easily alter the structure of the system they control.
The questionnaire was piloted in a sample of practice patients to establish its comprehensibility and the completeness of responses to the individual items.
The pilots have earlier received clearance from an air traffic controller to taxi to the runway.
He succeeded in piloting the ship into an unfamiliar fjord and signalled for assistance.
The forward section of the fuselage, which would have housed the covered pilot's cockpit and forward observer's cabin, was missing.
In order to understand how pilots interact in their daily routine work in different cultures and languages, naturally occurring interactions constitute the essential data.
Each was piloted in three practices using different clinical information systems.
First, the pilots and the evaluation methods are described brie y, and ndings are then presented for each site.
The theory and operationalization of memory measures has changed considerably since the 1960s when traditional aptitude tests were developed and piloted.
The article analyzes transcriptions of pilots interacting in the cockpit on actual scheduled passenger flights.
I used naturally occurring data, transcriptions from video recordings of airline pilots interacting in the cockpit on actual scheduled passenger flights.
Of course, airports vary in details from the point of view of pilots, managers, airport officials, regulators, passengers, their families, smugglers and other users.
The revised version was piloted with four care-home managers in four different localities.
Sentences found to be ambiguous during piloting were dropped.
The stimuli were piloted on several adult speakers from a variety of dialectal backgrounds, and modified accordingly.
The service was first piloted in 1998 as a means of providing a telephone listening service for (primarily older) people who are lonely and isolated.
In the following, we focus on three pilots that had the greatest influence in shaping the system.
In short, how do pilots establish, through processes of interaction, what next and when?
I consider and-prefacing in talk that is evidence of one pilot's monitoring and prompting another pilot's conduct.
The and-prefaced talk is evidence of how pilots themselves treat an action as noticeably and accountably absent.
In the airline cockpit, and-prefacing occurs as pilots collaborate to ensure timely performance of flight actions for work.
In many cases, these pilots experienced rapid registration of patients.
No previously validated questionnaires were available so draft versions were devised and piloted.
The final version was agreed after piloting with four asthmatic children (not from the survey practices), and comments from practice staff.
The questionnaire was piloted with 3 respondents and no alterations were made.
A pre-validated questionnaire [12] was adapted to our development of infection model for local use and piloted.
We are grateful to the members of the total purchasing pilots and health authorities for giving up their time for this study.
Small-scale pilots did not follow until 1994, and although larger ones were in place by 1998, there was much inertia.
The logistic curve was identified in one paper only and measured the error rates of pilots in a simulator (19).
All documentation was comprehensively piloted before the main study.
Launching pilots, ideally with multinational participation, will identify and help address key obstacles to implementing this option in different settings.
One chapter follows the fortunes of many of the squadron's pilots.
Secondly, some rivers had outports, populated by pilots, custom officers, and guards, together with fishermen.
Each of the four local authorities involved had already piloted user and carer involvement projects.
More generally, the healthy behaviour interventions literature strongly supports thorough piloting with the target population to ascertain their particular beliefs and influences.
In any case, these differences are piloted by the characteristics of the senses.
The test was initially piloted with children of the same age ranges as those in the current sample in a kindergarten.
Understanding stress responses will help develop strategies to overcome stressful problems encountered by space pilots.
From their responses, 45 questions were developed, edited for clarity, and piloted.
The questionnaire was piloted on a sample of 40 callers to check face and content validity and to test data collection procedures.
Because of time constraints, the questionnaire was not piloted.
The resource pack was piloted in the evaluation of this partnership.
The task was piloted on 39 graduate students.
The evaluators concluded that generally pilots targeting vulnerable populations experienced high levels of success in achieving their original objectives.
Instead, we piloted our coding frame using two coders, testing for reliability and dropping questions where the coders could not, after several tries, agree.
We are now beginning to see spoken language dialog systems deployed both as pilots and as real applications.
We gave them test results and short user profiles which were built with anonymised data from people who took part in pilots.
Rushing can increase workload and the possibility that pilots will omit actions, perform actions incompletely or inadequately, or plan poorly and make poor decisions.
How do pilots manage such moments and ensure an acceptable flow of talk for actions to perform tasks for their flight?
They detail the research, piloting and assessment that goes into their ongoing business plans.
122 same way in which air traffic controllers give instructions to aircraft pilots.
Thus, determining people's perception of vulnerability is an important step in piloting health promotion interventions.
Although evident, it is worth repeating that when piloting items, testdevelopers should make sure they have a representative sample of their intended future test takers.
Preparing, piloting and validating an instrument to measure young learners' aptitude.
The very nature of what they were doing - test piloting - dictated the style of conversation.
The tool has subsequently been piloted for research in related environments, such as hospital wards and sheltered housing, and found to need little adaptation.
We are doing pilots now in three regions, based on sound land-use planning at household and village level.
The outcome expectations measure was piloted on 32 women with breast cancer.
The questionnaire was piloted on 30 of these 610 women.
What we captured here was evidence of airline pilots' orientation to the importance of timeliness and strict sequential order for performing flight actions.
Much of pilots' time is spent monitoring instrument panels for evidence of aircraft performance, changing flight circumstances, and outcomes of their own actions.
We assume this reflects the fact that neither pilots nor traffic controllers are necessarily local to the airpor ts where their speech was recorded.
There have been a number of attempts to improve recruitment and retention, and examples of salaried schemes and personal medical service pilots are discussed.
Both methods were piloted and minor adjustments to the interview schedules were made.
He argued that should the totals of planes observed be similar this would be because the pilots had changed their flightpaths accordingly.
In both cases, the pilots were unable to demonstrate in detail any improvements in patient care or to quantify the work-load implications of the changes.
Few pilots extended their accountability through new relationships with their local communities.
Participants in both pilots expressed satisfaction with the results, although there were some dissenting voices.
None of the guidelines were piloted among the target users before validation.
In a nar row-angled course lear ners have almost homogeneous needs targeting one particular discipline or occupation (such as a course for pilots and air traffic controllers).
We might see here a form of evidence for pilots' orientation to perform some actions for tasks, like checklists, more strictly according to formal procedures and flight roles.
The potential for harmful disturbance to concentrations of birds makes it important to provide pilots with guidelines that would prevent or minimize damaging impacts during overflights.
The booking system was introduced very quickly (12), without piloting its impacts on patient access and outcomes, and with virtually no evidence to inform its implementation.
An expert biography pilots the reader through a graphic personal saga of ecclesiastical encounter with perplexities for mind and spirit.
At the analysis stage, it became clear that because the questionnaire had not been piloted, a number of questions were insufficiently precise (eg, not distinguishing lowfat from other yoghurts).
The pilots have resulted in new and exible primary care organizations, more resources for the primary care workforce and greater access to services for deprived or underserved populations.
When we piloted the remote system with two children, we found it was too difficult for children to restrict their body and head movements within the required range.
As in example (1), here we see the same kind of action on another flight, as the pilots are taxiing the aircraft to the runway for takeoff.
Here the pilots have noted that they are approaching their assigned altitude, and the altitude progress was confirmed by an altitude alert buzzer (there are also alert lights).
The questionnaires were piloted in five centres.
Given the unit costs which we have estimated, the five management scenarios examined in the pilots appear to be essentially neutral with respect to time and travel costs.
Only few and isolated pilots.
We must continue to enforce a no-fly zone, including giving the pilots the right to self-defence.
From Europarl Parallel Corpus - English
Furthermore, liberalisation now also extends to include the pilots.
From Europarl Parallel Corpus - English
Even ship pilots’ proper concerns over safety have met with indifference.
From Europarl Parallel Corpus - English
I also think that, as far as the composition of tyres is concerned, tyre manufacturers are rather more qualified than pilots.
From Europarl Parallel Corpus - English
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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