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词汇 example_english_trust
释义

Examples of trust


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 has been raised in circumstances in which trusting the police has been unjustified.
The contradictions have become so acute that words are no longer to be trusted.
Listed equity is composed of equity securities of listed corporations and units in listed unit trusts.
There is also the trace of a suggestion that for these reasons they can even be trusted more, being more innocent and, perhaps, neutral.
In total, 13 (35%) of the later trusts said that their health authorities had set the agenda, compared with five (19%) of the early trusts.
Our comparison of early and later trusts found little evidence that the process is being driven by building on success and developmental learning.
Rapid social changes had undermined the charitable objects of many trusts.
Could the 'cheap men ', or unskilled labourers employed by the electric company, be trusted to read the meter ?
Most adolescents also reported that their parents trusted how they handled their schoolwork.
Third parties were not trusted, in terms of their fairness or competence, and thus they did not necessarily have the ability to settle disputes.
When ranked according to performance on key variables 118 trusts scored three or less.
A qualitative study of the introduction of nurse practitioners trusted the judgement of nurse practitioners and signed prescriptions without assessing a patient (unless requested to).
One values being trusted oneself, merely because one wants to be included in co-operative ventures on terms that are advantageous.
If sufficient information is obtained and if this information can be trusted, the agent can reliably choose its interaction partners.
Of great significance here is that third parties were not necessarily trusted for their ability to be effective in settling disputes.
P trusts his parents, but not his sister.
Doctors should inform patients in a peaceful environment, either with the patient alone or accompanied by someone who the patient trusts.
Increased awareness of carer issues among policy-makers, primary care trusts and professionals is motivating efforts to implement and evaluate initiatives.
He set ' 'a clear direction,' ' my respondents said, then trusted his officials to follow through.
With all of these concerns, developing a trusting relationship between users and their agents is non-trivial.
Right-wing cabinets, trusting the capacity of private agents to supply the levels of savings and investment optimal to sustain growth, pushed through sizeable privatization packages.
Not trusting their employees, principals will be forced to invest in expensive monitoring and sanctioning devices to guard against opportunistic behaviour.
Checking an explicitly trusted expression succeeds and yields a trusted expression.
There are three kinds of values around during reduction: trusted, distrusted and untagged.
The majority of responding trusts reported a lack of resources to deliver more intensive levels of care.
The data were summarized to present those trusts where the service was available for 20 out of 24 hours for the reasons outlined above.
Remaining funds (14 %) were invested primarily in unit trusts.
The authors would like to thank all those who made time to participate in the survey at an exceptionally busy time for community trusts.
A loving community, it might be suggested, is one with genuine vulnerability where everyone trusts each other but does so without rational certainty.
The use of another person, to whom one trusts the security of one's body, is an important part of the work of building a group.
He always collaborates with me, and trusts me.
A lower trustor giving rate in the resettled communities reflects less trusting based on pure altruism compared to genetic closeness in the traditional communities.
The teminari [tribunal] also trusted your words when you courageously took an oath because people were scared of the oath.
Educational meetings were held by all trusts, although they varied in nature and extent and the planning of training was at an early stage.
An agent who receives a fact can transmit it back to the sender, as long as the sender is trusted.
Carers also thought that continuity was important, since it facilitated the development of trusting relationships and minimised confusion and anxiety.
If not all patients, then certainly most physicians would claim that patients in general are justified in trusting their doctors.
Hundreds of corporations across the country are simplifying their documents - employee benefit manuals, trusts, billing statements and wills.
In addition, it is possible to interactively declare further functions to be trusted during debugging.
He trusted his own political instincts to a great degree, and he trusted his own judgment.
Lawyers have always had reasons for not trusting to its loose constructions and potential excesses.
If we could, then perhaps trusting obedience might seem the right course.
In response, senior managers in hospital and community trusts are seeking evidence to support local clinicians with the necessary resources for improving effectiveness.
There was therefore considerable support for local leaders with embedded local social relationships who could be trusted to achieve this.
Combinations can be formed by informal agreement, by trusts, by mergers, and by holding companies.
Initially, he trusted his wares to carry his campaign.
Fifteen respondents reported titles that suggested executive positions within their trusts.
Since potential beneficiaries were likely to be too poor or otherwise disadvantaged to defend their own legal interests, a 'guardian' of charitable trusts was established.
The king was very fond of these three and trusted them.
The renewed fighting has shattered years of negotiations, but more importantly, robbed its citizens of trusting the other side and of the peace process.
Unlisted equity includes equity securities of unlisted corporations, units in unlisted private trusts, and interests in ventures.
The nurse trusted the doctor of the teacher who was preparing to go home.
The nurse trusted the doctor of the teachers who was preparing to go home.
Ambulances owned by community trusts were evacuating people and admitting them to hospitals.
First, most hospitals and primary care trusts are so complex that each will tend to have problems.
They were, it was suggested, too partial in their dealings and unworthy of being trusted with the powers this bill gave them.
They trusted each other to get things right.
In your case he told you because he trusts you.
Although this may not be intuitive, both populations have difficulty trusting their feelings regarding their memory.
Such trusts will be able to commission primary and community health care and social care.
The selected trusts were stratified into acute care and primarycare, and 70 per cent of each group were sampled (n=355).
Neither the local nor the national elections made any pretence of standing candidates who were anything other than loyal to and trusted by the regime.
However, clinical governance means that trusts have a responsibility to address the quality of all prescribing.
From the perspective of the state, teachers could no longer be trusted to represent the state in the margins; they were potentially subversives.
Over half of the trusts scored 3 or less.
The same dilemma recurs : if there are reasons for going on trusting, what role has faith to play ?
He thinks he took over this belief from trusting the environment in which he was raised.
As this paper is concerned with a higher-order language, functions are data as well so a function is itself either trusted or untrusted.
One of the significantly unexplored topics is mediated negotiation, in which a trusted, neutral third party assists negotiators in reconciling their views and interests.
Their argument is that such a broker has to be trusted by the parties in order to reduce the transaction costs.
There are two parties in a trusting relation: the principal who trusts, and the trustee who is the one who is entrusted.
Thus, both situations 'crowd in' trustworthiness and make trusting others a rational and efficient gamble.
Furthermore, government leaders are expected to have greater information than and consideration for the public, and are therefore trusted to do the 'right thing'.
As for "radicalism" and "extremism," these are in the eye of the beholder-my moderate may be your extremist, and your trusted ally my dangerous radical.
They offer a testbed for primary care trusts.
Together we may be able to provide a support service for primary care trusts to help research and development to go hand in hand.
Later trusts were more likely to be planning mergers which will take their populations above 200 000, more than twice the size originally envisaged.
In all cases, the later trusts were more likely to see these as obstacles to their progress.
Furthermore, it may be important for trusts to consider the ways in which they facilitate such learning within the everyday working environment.
Participants seemed to overcome personal thresholds through creative activities, as they attempted to craft something without really knowing or trusting their own capacities.
The writer trusts young readers to make up their own minds about life's big issues.
However, just as many questions can be raised about the wisdom of trusting to common sense.
They developed an experimental mechanism which extends fairness and generosity experiments to measure trusting and trustworthiness among individuals within groups.
To produce new kinds of individuals in the emerging moral order, women needed to be trained and trusted to f ulfill the task.
The person who offers food rather than withholding it can be trusted to protect and sustain in all other ways.
The other half, and the reversion in the first half, are held on the" statutory trusts" for the issue.
The changing trend of shareholdings was clear until 1981- individuals were owning far less compared with insurance companies, pension funds and trusts.
We will continue to need an effective and trusted police force.
The next two are concerned with trusts implied in their favour.
There is, however, a good deal of information in the texts about the wordings suitable for trusts.
How might these procedural differences have affected the structure and historical development of trusts?
Ulpian's words do not at all suggest that a remedy available for legacies was extended to cover trusts as well, but the reverse.
Only these circumstances are adequate to eliminate the substantive and procedural advantages which trusts could offer.
A proper understanding of the role of intention in trusts must therefore come from other texts.
Not to be trusted or even understood but to be treated with caution and sometimes indulged.
The child is not concerned because he trusts his pediatrician - conflating the pediatrician's role as clinician and scientist.
Thus, the argument seems to run, trusting is a way of respecting autonomy, something that we have a moral obligation to do.
I trusted him and was relieved that he was there.
Indeed, many trusts encourage regular saving through fixed monthly contributions.
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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