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词汇 example_english_turning-point
释义

Examples of turning point


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.
If no such turningpoint could be identified, the measurement was taken at mid-point.
For the healthcare systems of both countries the postwar period was a turningpoint.
The income level at which the turningpoint occurs is however unaffected by the normalization procedure.
A turningpoint is one in which the average developmental trajectory is disrupted in a positive or negative fashion.
The year 1948 was a turningpoint; it saw the emergence of an information metanarrative.
The turningpoint came in one of those public moments of humiliation commonly undergone by prima donnas.
When the inner electron reaches its inner turningpoint, the outer electron experiences a net attractive force from the screened nuclear potential.
A turningpoint seems to have been reached sometime in 1933.
Turningpoint predictions are calculated using a two quarters rule, as detailed in the next section.
The trajectory of the turningpoint is dense for almost all tent maps.
In this historical perspective, available evidence shows that the turningpoint came in the early 1950s.
The turningpoint for him came with understanding the interpretation of negative and imaginary numbers as points on the complex plane.
However, the impending release of a high-quality draft genome sequence in 2005 should mark a turningpoint in these efforts.
But the position of the turningpoint is indeterminate only because they assume general functional forms for the utility and abatement functions.
A major focus of attention is the behavior of the restriction of the map to the closure of the orbit of the turningpoint.
Since adding machines are minimal, such an adding machine has to be equal to the closure of the trajectory of the turningpoint.
For this group, the experiences of early adulthood served as a positive turningpoint in the course of well-being.
As mentioned before, orbits for which the resonance occurs close to the midplane or a turningpoint absorb the wave power efficiently.
Most of these series show signs of a turningpoint.
I want to suggest that the e difference between them catches the critical turningpoint of the 1930s and 1940s.
Certainly, it is a source of concern that these forecasts of emissions declines are based on a turningpoint that occurs out of sample.
When there is a confluence of developmental vulnerability and a disruptive ecological transition, a "turningpoint" in development may ensue.
In the author's judgement, the sixteenth century was a turningpoint for converts.
Being held back in school also represents a life event that fits this definition of a turningpoint.
The sharp step-up in growth rates, not only aggregate but also sectoral, suggests that 1980-81 was the turningpoint.
There were also other developments which tended to render the mid- to later 1970s a turningpoint as far as dissent was concerned.
For the sample mean population density, the turningpoint for deforestation is $823 per capita.
Demonstrating this is fairly direct if the turningpoint is periodic or not recurrent.
The 1960s, with the breakthrough of civilian society, thus became a turningpoint.
This eigenvalue passes through zero in a turningpoint.
A typical pattern is that a mode becomes cut on at the fan face and a single turningpoint is present upstream.
However, the revolt of 1911 was a turningpoint.
Yet that operation marked a historical turningpoint on the way to the 1956 war.
Turningpoint predictions can be computed from the predictive density of future observations.
Mental distress in bereaved parents was found to decrease over time without any distinct turningpoint.
In either case, 1991-92 is not a turningpoint.
The turningpoint is slightly lower, as might be expected, at 302, 000, 000 ha.
The resultant turningpoint should therefore be treated with caution.
In this sense, organizational effects of hormones can mark a turningpoint in development.
This group is often called the '45ers' because the year 1945 became the crucial turningpoint in their lives.
Trends in statutory and non-statutory welfare expenditures also show that the end of the 1990s was an important turningpoint.
What currency is there, then, in the notion of a 'turningpoint' from a theatrical perspective?
These improvements are reflected in more accurate turningpoint predictions.
The global emissions-income relation is monotonic with the estimated turningpoint far above all countries' income levels.
Further, the turningpoint is far less clearly defined.
There are strongly accelerated electrons in the downgoing loss cone and mirroring particles outside the loss cones and the circular turningpoint boundary.
Presence of circulatory diseases, sporadic confinement to bed, and deterioration of condition had a significant impact upon the incidence of such a turningpoint.
A turningpoint was identified in 160 records.
Previously, scholars have stressed the year 1964 as the turningpoint.
In retrospect, the decision to create a separate disability program was a turningpoint in the development of workmen's compensation.
To begin with, there are many indications that the late fifties were a turningpoint.
This improved performance is also matched by more appropriate turningpoint detection.
Furthermore, an estimated turningpoint at a relatively low level of per capita income does not mean that, globally, emissions will be falling.
The turningpoint for the curvilinear relationship between money and duration is at 0.61, where candidates raise about two-thirds as much money as the front runner.
It was a turningpoint.
He is caught at a turningpoint between an older rural world and a more modern, urbanizing one.
The year 1816 marked a turningpoint.
Therefore, we report turningpoint predictions for the seven countries as a whole in each procedure.
As such, the introduction of the concept was a turningpoint in legal considerations, even though there was considerable argument over where and how it might be applied.
The author concluded the 1911 revolution was the turningpoint where common space in the city was transformed into a political arena, but after the revolution that function deteriorated remarkably.
This reported turningpoint is for smoke.
This is interpreted by some authors and policymakers to mean that increasing improvements in environment quality will occur once a specific income level 'turningpoint' is passed.
In 1927 came the great turningpoint in his life.
The -limit set of a recurrent, non-periodic, turningpoint is called a solenoid if it is obtained from infinitely many renormalizations.
More work will be involved in establishing a strong expansion along periodic orbits of high period near the -limit set of a non-periodic but recurrent turningpoint.
We therefore have the possibility of modes becoming trapped within the duct between the turningpoint location and the fan, generating pure acoustic resonance.
In that case there is no turningpoint.
In 1970 there was a turningpoint.
The year 1898 marked a turningpoint.
This would indicate that emissions will begin to rise again once a second income turningpoint is passed.
A major turningpoint in the company's history was the six-month world tour which was undertaken in 1964.
This book marked a turningpoint in his relationship with the monarchy.
The turningpoint in growth was 1980, whereas economic liberalization began in 1991.
If population declines with increases in per capita income, then the turningpoint for total emissions will occur at lower incomes than the turningpoint for per capita emissions.
The disintegration of that aristocratic society in the tenth century serves as a turningpoint in the history of the printed book.
Cultural critics have mimicked the analysts' refrain, "a new type of patient," asserting that his appearance marks a significant turningpoint in our nation's long history of decline.
It needs to be stressed that this turningpoint in the early 1950s was not just statistical, nor was it simply about growth rates.
This type of bifurcation corresponds to the turningpoint.
If the cut-off region between the two turning points is long enough, then the behaviour is very similar to that of the single turningpoint case.
However, the fact that there exists a turningpoint is very important, as it clearly indicates that after the cusp forms, the bifurcation seems to have moved to infinity.
The thin dashed line in (a) is the wall shape at the turningpoint, * in (b).
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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