词汇 | example_english_shrink |
释义 | Examples of shrinkThese 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 effect of monocular lid suture is obvious in individual animals, because deprivation shrinks one eye's columns and expands the other's. He noted that this contract curve was shrinking as the number of agents was growing, leading eventually to the competitive equilibrium. As the opportunity value of continued existence shrinks, the corresponding duty fades to insignificance and eventually disappears altogether. As shrinks further, the only interior equilibrium that still exists is nonmonetary, but it disappears as becomes sufficiently low. As anticipated, the impact of costs shrinks as the plan grows larger but the effect differs by plan type. In this case the implementations of functions use interval arithmetic and approximations to transcendental functions that get more accurate as the input interval shrinks. Since usage counts can increase (by shrinking inlining or record selection) as well as decrease (by any shrinking rule), this might seem dangerous. In the developed world, many enterprises increasingly operate in situations in which traditional assets, (physical and monetary) are of shrinking importance to business success. In other words, a base of reduplication is never shrunk down to size in a reduplicative context in order to better satisfy base-reduplicant identity. In the region of the wake, the plasma shrinks in size, and forms a narrow plasma channel. The same tendency to form rapidly shrinking sub-sheets was found and described in [27, 36]. Without fanfare, the official consensus estimate of the size of the problem is shrunk. An object in space possesses three degrees of freedom that determine its spatial relationship with other objects, namely, transition, rotation, and scaling enlargements or shrinking!. As we can see this is not true, but the difference in the constant in the exponent shrinks surprisingly quickly as m becomes large. There is also a well-defined temporal sequence where a given cell grows, then exchanges fluid with a neighbouring cell, and then shrinks. What once loomed large has shrunk in significance. Figure 14 indicates the result of the enlarging and shrinking platform strategy. With this procedure, the designer can systematically implement the "expanding and shrinking platform" strategy. The prospect almost certainly deterred those who shrank from so exposing their private life from seeking a public imprimatur for their personal marital failure. Ghanaians support some aspects of structural adjustment (like market pricing), but not others (like shrinking the state). Given a cross-section of expanding and shrinking plants, little overall correlation may emerge between size and productivity growth. Such a policy ensures that the price of consumption will rise while this elasticity is growing and fall while the elasticity is shrinking. The cost data required transformation (exponentiation) to produce lognormal distributions, which had the effect of shrinking the actual correlations toward zero. At time t + 1, the individual has experienced a reduction in visual acuity and the capability set has shrunk. When the object moves away from the viewer, the size of the object shrinks and the visual angle decreases. However, the retina shrank only by about 1% relative to the pigment epithelium, so this does not seem to be the case. A shrinking rural labor pool and/or competition from other non-farm industries may limit producers' ability to get dependable labor for their operations. The 'gap' between the two parties shrank from 36 points to 17 points. Note that a convolution usually shrinks slightly the domains of definition of functions. The possibilities for performing in churches shrank as the number of invitations dwindled sharply. Because the size of technological devices is ever shrinking, once irrelevant phenomena at the microscopic level are now considered relevant. A strengthening of a problem shrinks the feasible set, and a relaxation enlarges it. Instead of shrinking, as you would think it would be in the twentieth century, this movement is growing in popularity. Based on the "expanding and shrinking platform" strategy, plausibility of upgrading functions should be reflected in the size of the platform. We employ two approaches to solve this problem: expanding and shrinking platform and delayed selection of components. However, shrinking time to market for complex, high technology products can be extremely difficult and costly. Thus, the design solution space undergoes expansion and shrinking throughout a design process. On the contrary, it shrank from 28.1 to 19.1 points. Over a period of time the sac epithelialises and shrinks facilitating closure of the inevitable ventral hernia. Improved statistical tests for differential gene expression by shrinking variance components estimates. Thus, the window of time required for pregnancy is shrinking and could feasibly become redundant. The one disadvantage of green oak is that it shrinks as it dries. Though both effects were strong, they were not orthogonal: the presence of focus shrank the predicted-accent effect by more than half. The bacteria have a lacy appearance and the cells have shrunk leaving space between them. A shrinking hear t was associated with intense episodes of either fear or anger. The high cost of unemployment benefits and related social costs combined with the shrinking tax base to blow out the fiscal deficit. They point out that it may not simply be recruitment fatigue, but also that the pool of potential participants may be shrinking. Slow economic growth and rising unemployment were accompanied by shrinking tax revenues and increasing expenditures because of the growing number of retired persons. Though the field has shrunk, the dilemma remains the same. We can simplify our implementation of shrinking inlining by requiring that any function called exactly once have its definition deleted. The opinion gap across the wars shrinks as political information rises, all but disappearing at the highest information level. The indeterminacy region shrinks as the response to the output gap (horizontal axis) increases. The human figures reduced to type, shrank in size, and lurked the margins as guides to the monumental scale of nature's nation. In turn, this implies a shrinking labor force, which is exacerbated by productivity declines with age. On the other hand the length of the drop is determined by the balance of stretching by the flow with shrinking by surface tension. In this idealized situation the polytope has shrunk to a point at the origin; and the unit sphere (equivalently the sphere at infinity) is invariant. The mean household size has been shrinking in the period from 1981 to 1998. A reduction in eyesight as a result of eye disease may restrict an individual's attainable benefits, thereby shrinking the whole set of attainable activities. Section thickness was 50 xm after cutting, which shrank to 12 fjim after mounting on gelatin-coated slides. The economic income of the entire planet shrinks down to the value of a car when so discounted. Moreover, the shrinking role of the family and of employers in welfare provision has also increased old-age insecurity, and places increased importance on public pensions. Governments that want to compensate these losers now confront the footloose capital that shrinks the tax base and penalizes deficit spending. Through memory, in other words, the forensic self perceives his own "shrinking" possibilities; and through memory he apprehends a separation of consciousness. The ' act of safety ' (moving to an old age home) becomes ever more urgent when the time horizon shrinks and resources become increasingly uncertain. Co-residence is now in decline, and the increasing number of married women in employment also suggests that the pool of family carers is shrinking. Therefore, neoadjuvant chemotherapy for patients with this type of tumour who are trying to attempt breastconservation therapy by shrinking the tumour may not be worthwhile. After the cocoon is spun the larva becomes inactive and shrinks in size, this prepupal condition lasting for a day or at most two. As sample sizes increase, shrinking confidence intervals ultimately exclude zero. As mentioned, the informal support network of the older person sometimes shrinks when members of the network die. The second term shows that inbreeding depression always declines as the population size shrinks. Second, the sets we are showing are shrinking in measure at a superpolynomial rate are larger than just vn neighborhoods of points. After 20 quarters, the density function still has not shrunk even close to a point. Unhealthy parasites were shrunken, mishapen and/or had haemozoin pigment which did not appear to be in a single food vacuole. On the other hand, the phase orbits corresponding to oscillatory motion can be smoothly shrunk to a point and are thus topologically distinct. Because the unit cell usually shrinks more than the individual macromolecules, the interstices get smaller with cooling. At the same time, higher colonial recruitment became more appealing to the general staff, struggling to adjust to its shrinking defence budget. The first is stretching / shrinking to a predefined height, which does not occur in formula layout. More generally, variation in the geographic concentration of industry is likely to shed light on topics ranging from declining union density to shrinking voter turnout. As the supply of this labour shrinks, the state has only a limited range of options before it. Part 1 covers the thorny issues of intensification of agriculture, rural poverty and shrinking biodiversity. First, the new system provided a disincentive for local governments to promote local economic growth, and thus shrunk local tax bases. By the end of the century, the diaspora had shrunk drastically. First, through the contraction of public expenditure on social security and services, state funding on education in real terms has shrunk considerably. At that time, the core of the star shrinks and the outer layers of the star are no longer suppor ted. Although the interval has been shrunk, nevertheless the time matching method must be applied to traverse the interval. As the workforce is shrinking, its stamina and morale may also be suffering. Chaplaincies expanded into new institutions but often shrank in terms of the number of students who supported them. In both cases, the region influenced by a boundary condition shrinks with the boundary to leave no trace of its previous existence as it disappears. If this base shrinks, so will the opportunity to grow. At the same time, the area of forests and woodlands is shrinking with changes in land use. Most of us ignore the "landfill crisis," the fact that landfill space is shrinking while the quantity of waste generation by municipalities continues to expand. The existentialist self must, therefore, inevitably decline as mortality is confronted and the future horizon shrinks. Due to shrinking revenues however, they are forced to ration their services. If this holds, we could say that the shrinking steps of non-wandering sets are also algebraically invariant as in the case of other elementary sets. The distributional implication of these trends was the granting of higher remuneration to a shrinking pool of workers who remained in the industrial sector. In many industries, the number of global providers is shrinking rapidly. A decrease in the working population would then worsen the budget constraint problem by shrinking the economy and the tax base. 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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