词汇 | example_english_prone |
释义 | Examples of proneThese 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. Cheaters are agents with high discount rates, prone to defraud others in exchange. Positioning of obese patients seems more prone to set-up errors and requires online position verification. However, highly virulent pathogens are prone to local extinction, and there are a number of strategies for persistence. Regulation, however comprehensive and widely ratified and implemented, is unlikely to prove highly successful since it is prone to enforcement deficit. To illustrate, beings with limited cognitive capacities are prone to mistakes in utility calculations. Patients were positioned in either the supine or prone position depending on the type of tumour. More specifically, if students are prone to take criticism very personally, perhaps this may have a deleterious effect on their music education. Manually adding best-fit curves to data plots can be laborious and prone to error. Concomitant to facile availability and media exposure, youth are prone to consume these compounds at a young age. Writing picklers by hand is a tedious and error-prone business. However, using recursive solutions can often be a less error-prone methodology. The result is low wages that make workers prone to unionization. Dichotomous measures (democracy\\authoritarianism) are particularly prone to this deficiency. Sufficiently small bodies are prone to non-gravitational forces, and ejection times are reduced by many orders of magnitude. A perception that the physician has somehow cheated on that expected reciprocation is prone to evoke a most strident form of aggression. Broadsheets are read by the better educated whose class, income and status may make them less prone to political malaise. Learning more sophisticated classifiers is more prone to noise as a single mail may belong to several classes. Investigations of the role of class with cross-sectional data are prone to miss this kind of interaction. The decision to settle or move to an earthquake-prone location is typically a free choice of no moral significance. Complex sensing and actuation systems may be prone to failure in the harsh environment. Admittedly, everyone tends to do this sort of thing, but the religious seem especially prone to doing so. The everted sac experiments are prone to methodological errors, especially damage caused by the everting procedure, but we took great care to minimize these. Finally, "intermediate" families showed moderate levels of cohesiveness, yet were also more prone to psychological morbidity. In other words, women may be more prone to fall into the category of "chemical copers" than men. All were cross-sectional and therefore prone to cohort bias ; true differences resulting from age can only be measured by longitudinal studies. Such situation is prone to vigorous growth of laser plasma instabilities. The conscripts were more prone to flee than to fight. They are thought to be par ticularly prone to par ticipation in bar fights and crimes of passion. First, what can be done to increase food production in a country prone to substantial food deficits and with a rapidly increasing population ? The attempt to determine the relative importance of each is thus deemed futile and prone to ideological bias. Despite all the expenditure, this was not a hedonist society prone to excesses. Policymakers with a managerial style will be prone to extensive quango creation, both in numbers and degrees of freedom for the organisations involved. Part of the reason for this is that such organisations are quite prone to reproducing and exacerbating local inequalities and conflicts within their structures. However, symptoms are often subjective and prone to recall bias. Given the high demand for skilled workers and the risks involved in leaving the arsenals, skilled workers were more prone to abscond than common laborers. Extracting the color of a surface is error-prone, unless the surface is that of a known object. English lexical insertions in particular are prone to appear bare. When these functions are viewed as random variables defined for a given failure-prone graph, their expected values give performance measures. In many cases, the analysis of performance measures involves expansions over subgraphs of the failure-prone graph, in a certain way. First, what conditions, in terms of investment, demographic, and economic parameters, make a developing economy more or less prone to population overshoot and resource collapse? Second, the principle allows as prudent exactly the actions that we are most prone to judge imprudent. Furthermore, the method is not continuous and it is prone to subjective variability. Furthermore, pts who had undergone cardiac catheterization were more prone to develop sepsis. Increased amygdala and insula activation during emotion processing in anxiety-prone subjects. Anger-prone children tended to perceive others as angry, and fear-prone children tended to perceive others as scared. They are prone to brief losses of reality, transient hallucinatory, or illusory phenomena and paranoid states. They are secondarily influenced by the physiologically forced postponement of childbearing by some stillbirth-prone women. The stillbirth-prone women require more pregnancies to achieve the same number of live births. As readers of detective fiction, however, we are potentially much less prone to such existential and hermeneutic anxieties. However, triphthongs and diphthongs were prone to systematic errors. Thus, the prototype machine did not have a usable interface which meant experimentation was time-consuming and error-prone. He is no less prone than other historians to think in such terms, and the polarities he uses are, in themselves, no more sophisticated. However, the nature of the guidelines is that their interpretation and application is prone to a degree of subjectivity. One therapeutic area that is particulary prone to an increased consumption of high-cost pharmaceuticals is oncology. In the long term, such interactions may caution against pursuing forest management in cyclone-prone areas. The other singular values are less prone to inflation. Apparently, species with smaller niches (= specialists) have less chance to survive deforestation and are more prone to local extinction than those with wider niches. A clustering algorithm that forms these classes on a strict numerical basis offers a resolution less prone to bias than ad hoc visual methods. Once again the writing is brilliantly inventive but prone, too, to lapse into rhythmic banalities. Against all odds: explaining high host specificity in dispersal-prone parasites. A rhodopsin mutant linked to autosomal dominant retinitis pigmentosa is prone to aggregate and interacts with the ubiquitin proteasome system. The term "consciousness," for example, is prone to misconception. Males are more frequently affected with hare lip and cleft palate and pyloric stenosis while females are more prone to congenital dislocation of the hip. While this growth habit has an advantage in fire-prone savannas, it may be costly in less fire-prone forest environments. Hence, it is an unreliable, inherently error prone process, which reduces the overall confidence in the resulting profiles. Without any additional support, however, this is an error-prone approach, liable to end up with semantically incoherent versions of components interoperating. Patients prone to claustrophobia, and those with a pacemaker or atrial fibrillation were excluded. Notably, endemic island populations that are more prone to extinction than non-endemic populations have lower genetic diversity and higher inbreeding levels than non-endemic populations. However, meta-programming, especially in an untyped setting, is notoriously error-prone. The moral is that certain phonetic environments, apparently, would seem intrinsically prone to irregularity. Increased occurrence of depression in psychosis-prone subjects : a follow-up study in primary care settings. In addition, the sensitivity of the bilayer approach makes it particularly prone to reporting the activity of contaminating channels. The effect of amyloidogenic mutations may be to increase the population of aggregation-prone states or to strengthen interactions in the aggregate. Assigning scores to the constraints is a labor-intensive and error-prone task. Paper is also prone to removal by wind. As a result, the adoption of modern varieties has been very low in complex, diverse and risk-prone environments13. They were not more prone to recognize happy affect. Bank-based systems with their corporatist structure are less prone to facilitate fast changes in firm strategies. The difficulty of adopting accommodative institutions in a society prone to severe conflict can be approached at several levels. Despite their popularity and their image as easy-to-use, spreadsheets are highly error-prone. Ironically, the groups that devote most attention to recruiting and retaining membership might be particularly prone to instability. If players make binding commitments, there is prone to be collective action failure. Democracies are therefore less prone to implement distorting public policies. However, he was also prone to withdraw from them, even sitting out in the classroom catching up on paper work, including the grading of tests. Would a world in which democratic politics was under attack and totalitarianism was on the rise be more prone to war? Such systems are less prone to undercounting than traditional public health reporting systems, and they are less resource intensive than traditional sentinel surveillance systems. They are prone to the" herd instinct", and politicians can easily lead them by the nose. In the previous chapter it was pointed out that testimony in cattle-stealing cases was particularly prone to stereotyped ritual delivery. The traditional wood for coffins is elm, being cross-grained and therefore less prone to splitting; it is also to some extent water-resistant. The reason for this was probably that the sediments were deposited largely under sabkha conditions and therefore were particularly prone to exposure and freshwater flushing. The prone position is not used for elderly patients or those with severe perceptual problems who might become severely disorientated, with increased flexor spasticity. Micro-economic questions are: why were some people more prone to unemployment than others and what determined the duration of their unemployment? Moreover, these very early memories may be more prone to increasing error over time than later memories. I do not predict that everyone who has very lifelike imagery will be prone to developing the disorder. In all, then, this is a timely collection, generally well written, but prone to a certain degree of repetition. Inquisitors may well have seen heretics as particularly prone to the sins of avarice and usury. 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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