词汇 | example_english_resonate |
释义 | Examples of resonateThese 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. The fluctuation is localized at the surface where the frequency (real) of the stable diocotron waves resonates with the flow continuum. In this conceptual scheme, the radiating element (bell, resonating body, etc.) is implicitly enclosed within the resonator. The framing of discourse, then, resonates strongly with the way the exhibits themselves are framed visually. However, the new policy resonates awkwardly with an unfortunate venture some 40 years ago. The actual arrangement resonates between the two or three alternative structures. What ensued from that debate became a mythic moment that resonates throughout countless memoirs, documentaries and commentaries on the period. We learn about women's and men's daily survival strategies and how money and mobility resonated within the more intimate worlds of sexuality and marriage. First, they resonated with existing and very deepseated intellectual predispositions. The romantic ideal of self-overcoming within the ' superman ' literature resonated with feminist thought. The defence of employment and public service resonated with the wider public. Such experiences (physical discomfort, difficulties with stamina, acute performance anxiety) resonated with me as a player. One consequence of this approach would be a school music pedagogy, which was transformative in nature because it resonated with the children's view of themselves. An organism's nervous system resonates to environmental regularities because the nervous system itself is an embodiment of those regularities. The moment resonates with the tremors of conquest. Thus stated, the message sounds almost banal, but on stage it was striking and resonated with great power. The samples were time stretched and resonated at varying harmonic bands. However, since the technique models a resonating tube as well as a fixed string, it is equally suited for processing sampled sound. The new theoretical language, which uses expressions such as "individual goals," "linguistic strategies," and "mobilization," clearly resonates with the social-science notion of agency. Faucalised voice in (d) has higher pitch, lower larynx and a wide expanded pharyngeal resonating space. Valves 4, 5 and 6 are most significant in shaping the resonating cavity of the pharynx. The talk resonated strongly with the audience and reminded all of us that there are principles, ideas and ideals that endure. The original significance of timbre involved only one resonating body. The transition from stage to gardens, from a passive to an active entertainment, suggests that the masque resonated uniquely with audiences. The union's broad base of public support also suggested that material grievances resonated beyond the ranks of communists and union activists. Instead, it resonates in your mind long after its two hours are up. The story of that experience is a rich source of information which readily resonates with practitioners as well as academics. Each one of these points resonates with changing perceptions of ageing and the positioning of maturity within contemporary discourse. The free long waves can be resonated inside the narrow channel. The terminology of risk, adopted in the early 1990s, resonated with changes in public attitudes about risk. They present a strong methodological point, that resonates through the rest of the book. However, our main line of analysis resonates most closely with those studies of violence that examine the production and reproduction of discourses of violence. In contrast, the independent poetic texts in each scene are resonated but not stretched. British discourses about urban juvenile crime and disorder had an impact that resonated in the cities of the colonial world. Not all of his films resonated with his fans. We have no way of knowing the extent to which this position resonated in social practice. How differently, then, the words "not dead, but sleeping," must have resonated. Kipling's ironic deployment of abhorrent discourses of racial essentialism resonates throughout his opening sentence. Is there any way in which the functioning of the dorsal system can be said to be resonating to the visual input reaching it? To use a more appropriate metaphor, statements and arguments about social status resonated most sonorously when voiced within the walls of the church. Here, the disturbance frequency resonates with harmonics of the basic-state nutational frequency (details omitted). With these caveats in mind, the long-term properties of the model clearly resonates well with the data. One aspect that resonates with this claim is the manner in which spatial context has been explored. The longitudinal standing wave is synchronously forced and resonated while the cross-wave is not resonant and is of higher order in amplitude. In the case of the environment, however, these norms are not resonating widely, even though opportunity structures are more open domestically. Appearing as if produced by a resonating body or volume of air, with life-like temporal variation, is often enough. A stretched version of these resonated sounds creates a choral-like texture at key points. Initial study findings were also presented to various groups of palliative care experts, who confirmed that the interpretations resonated with their clinical experiences. The implications of the uprising resonated widely, both inside the kingdom and out. The medium of a school is so impor tant because it resonates with practices in domains outside and beyond the school. His commitment resonates with the creation of the open society. Four key themes were explored and these resonated strongly during interview-based research2 with key stakeholders. I have argued that these styles of carrying out microscopic research resonated with characteristic features of the local setting. Although it has met with challenges, its legacy resonates in much of the biomedical research involving minority ethnic groups. Against this mobile background, soft strokes on the deeply resonating tam-tams in group 1 to groups 3 and 4 create a rich, spatially extended continuous sonority. The project was a site where the technical fed into the environmental and resonated within the viewer, defining a bridge, connecting the occupier to that which was occupied. From numerical examples it is shown that only the free long waves are resonated at low frequencies ; the locked long waves may be ignored for practical purposes. Another theme that begs exploration, and one which resonates with the contemporary interest in the symbolic dimensions of popular politics, is the language of the built environment of the communities. By contrast to resonating sympathy, which is only allowed to remain in remoter backgrounds of the novel's action, a third kind of sympathy is rather massively staged. The "strength" to tell the truth that "help is vain," that consciousness and long struggle alone could bring about social change, is a quality that resonates with twentieth century socialism. Each performance has also to measure up to an ideal realisation of the score, implicitly resonating along with the actual performance the audience sees and hears. Whether it is caused by constriction or whether it results secondarily from other simultaneous articulations, its effect is to reduce the size of the resonating pharyngeal space. The policy resonated with what many individuals were thinking and what they and organizations were already engaged in doing, but it also provided the structuring dimension for the agents. Moreover, the mathematical context of the expression resonates with other language of number in our lyric, as we will see in a moment (calculus, racio, rata). E-field distribution pattern of operating modes in a beam-wave oscillating cavity, the resonating band between the injected electron beam and a certain cavity mode is obtained. The filters allow sounds to pass through adjustable frequency bands up to a level where the filter itself resonates and accompanies the treated sound with a sort of spectral reverberation. The sampling process resonates with various forms of non-digital music-making, and is also both constructive and critical of the larger digital culture of which it is a part. Even in situations in which these conditions exist, a party's success depends on its ability to articulate a message that resonates with the views and aspirations of the voters. Finally, the student movement successfully addressed the challenge of constructing a frame of meaning that not only resonated with student activists, but also appealed to the larger public. He meant here and now in this school of architecture, but his tone was deeply challenging in such a way that the question resonated much further. What resonated best of all, perhaps, was the combination of factors, mentioned above, which can be heard as teleological, as though driving purposefully toward a goal. The character of the resonating flow may be quite unusual and not anticipated on the basis of low frequency (quasi-steady) or high frequency (relaxed steady) information. A theme, stressed by practitioners of the linguistic turn, that resonates in goldfields protest, is the ' narratives of leadership ' that were drawn upon in the new context. Indeed, this issue has resonated throughout our constituencies, if my postbag is anything to go by. From the Hansard archive Example from the Hansard archive. Contains Parliamentary information licensed under the Open Parliament Licence v3.0 Let us give it another name, because it resonates with other implications. From Europarl Parallel Corpus - English However, one of their arguments resonated with me, although it was treated somewhat dustily by many of my colleagues. From the Hansard archive Example from the Hansard archive. Contains Parliamentary information licensed under the Open Parliament Licence v3.0 The success of the independent living fund is but the most graphic illustration of how an approach that maximises user choice resonates with disabled people. From the Hansard archive Example from the Hansard archive. Contains Parliamentary information licensed under the Open Parliament Licence v3.0 Swraj means freedom—the eternal cry that resonated in my youth. From the Hansard archive Example from the Hansard archive. Contains Parliamentary information licensed under the Open Parliament Licence v3.0 They have had an effect which has resonated throughout the world and has had substantial global implications. From the Hansard archive Example from the Hansard archive. Contains Parliamentary information licensed under the Open Parliament Licence v3.0 In page after page of 1,800 pages, the report resonates with a criticism of the conduct of public business. From the Hansard archive Example from the Hansard archive. Contains Parliamentary information licensed under the Open Parliament Licence v3.0 I believe that the public's view resonates very strongly: everyone who is involved in those industries should have the same right to choose. From the Hansard archive Example from the Hansard archive. Contains Parliamentary information licensed under the Open Parliament Licence v3.0 Payback really resonates with them. From the Hansard archive Example from the Hansard archive. Contains Parliamentary information licensed under the Open Parliament Licence v3.0 The resulting acrimony still resonates within the region. From Wikipedia This example is from Wikipedia and may be reused under a CC BY-SA license. The amplitude plot shows that at low frequencies, the damping mass resonates much more than the primary mass. From Wikipedia This example is from Wikipedia and may be reused under a CC BY-SA license. The ad resonated with many the public, and was described as art by a number of viewers. From Wikipedia This example is from Wikipedia and may be reused under a CC BY-SA license. Quite aside from the term's use in the argument as a passing example, the word hypogram resonates with a number of other possible meanings. Interestingly, the word "basic" in this context resonates with another use of the term - "basic science" - that may illuminate the problem we face. In the higher frequency range both locked and free long waves could be resonated. The free long waves inside the harbour may be resonated in a low-frequency range which is relevant to the harbour resonance. They demonstrated that the free long waves can be resonated inside the harbour. The frequency range about the linear resonant frequencies for which there is a resonating wavelet is the linear resonance region. We can conclude therefore that governance resonates with one of the founding interests of the discipline of social policy. In other words, an individual should be able to decide and act in a manner that resonates with her values and belief system. Each stroke is resonated in a stereo digital delay line where the feedback level is gradually raised until it dominates the original sound. The bell as it was resonated with one part of his voice, and the modulated one resonated with the other part. The comb filter produced a pitched quality by resonating at certain pitches when excited by the speech input. The evocative power of the song path depends on how the place narrative emotionally resonates with personal, biographical and historical selfconsciousness for listeners. Transfer of electron spin density from the paramagnetic center to the resonating nucleus is somehow related to chemical bonds. He cultivated this self-image through unceasing teaching and writing that resonated well beyond systematic theology. 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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