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词汇 example_english_venue
释义

Examples of venue


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.
Research reveals however that many older people shun these venues.
Curiously, they have not intersected in terms of commissioning venues, implying the existence of a one-through-at-a-time dynamic.
The contrast between earthquakes and hurricanes is starkly illustrated by differences in the venues in which testimony on these phenomena occur.
Second, advocacy groups choose venues not only to advance substantive policy goals but also to serve organizational needs, or reinforce organizational identities.
To begin, venues are directly tied to policy solutions, and advocacy groups do have preferences in this regard.
More sophisticated advocacy groups and policy entrepreneurs presumably have a rather accurate sense of the opportunities and constraints associated with various venues.
During the 1830s and 1840s as respectable politics moved to indoor venues, the authorities increasingly regulated and restricted remaining open-air gatherings.
The author opens up new venues of thought and new questions for future works in this field.
The data were collected at home parties, lunchtime breaks, and other private venues.
The second category investigates how and why interest groups pursue their agendas in diverse venues.
On rare occasions, they transformed themselves into performance venues for live music ranging beyond jazz to rock and blues.
Although the venues are similar in these ways, they are vastly contrasting in others.
Their venues became packed with fans the band didn't even know they had.
You are going to need to develop a following if you want to move on and play bigger and better venues.
Occupying intersticial positions between genres, performance venues and levels of cultural artefact, burlesques breached cultural categories within the theatrical world.
We might imagine a continuum that represents the relative 'stickiness' of various issues with particular venues.
More of the older pupils went to venues to hear live music, most commonly music concerts.
In this study, venues also include non-state governance arenas such as the marketplace, which are increasingly becoming sites of policy conflict and negotiation.
During the 1999 academic year, the department mounted some 100 concerts in out-of-college venues + something of a milestone for us.
Collaborators can then follow up with the identified low use growers to develop a mechanism for farmer-to-farmer field days or other information sharing venues.
In each of these political venues, distinctions and oppositions developed between batch and bulk industrial segments.
The sheer scale of concert, choral and music hall performances and venues is striking.
In order to be ' real ', actions and venues must be shown to have some direct impact on high politics and policy decisions.
During colonial times they brought their worries to bear in new venues.
Each provided a variety of venues for rallying one's peers to a cause, in short for establishing a reputation for leadership.
Ethics rounds in clinical ethics have already taken hold in multiple venues.
Older dancers readily and repeatedly expressed their enjoyment of dancing, and at some venues the immense pleasure was immediately visible to an observer.
Recruitment for the organic specialist position included advertisements in agricultural professional society journals and other venues.
The movement's advocates were perhaps over-anxious to stress the popularity of singing at those venues where it had been inserted into a pre-existing event.
As important components of local food systems, farmers' markets are valuable venues for small farmers.
A somewhat different perspective is afforded when we examine institutional venues themselves.
I focus in particular on the motivations and goals of advocacy groups who may, or may not, search for alternative policy venues.
Indeed, the group may stop searching for alternative venues altogether.
They now travel to the towns and venues for a festive outing with friends, in search of cultural enrichment, tourism, or simply a party.
In addition, much of this work has been presented orally at conferences and other venues (see acknowledgements in footnote 1).
Current writing patterns (even in published venues) increasingly suggest that normative spelling is now optional.
Wolf then turned to a vivid account of performance venues in which early symphonies and proto-symphonies were heard.
Peronist participation built upon classic liberal forms (such as elections), while creating additional venues for interaction between state authorities and the public.
Admittedly they do not transform villanesche into dramatic dialogues, but they do suggest proximity to performance venues.
Small successes in existing venues might actually spur an advocacy group or policy entrepreneur to pursue more lofty goals in alternative venues.
However, the use of modeled censers and some pierced ladle and scored censers was restricted to less observable, and thus potentially more private, venues.
All dance venues in these areas for dancers in the older ages were mapped to discover the extent and nature of the phenomenon.
Most student performances now take place across a large number of public venues outside the college.
Other venues such as disco, karaoke, etc. were also uncommon; only 83 girls (9.5 per cent) and 48 boys (5.5 per cent) chose them.
I am grateful to participants at both venues for stimulating discussion and feedback.
However, the regulatory changes represent a collective encouragement for venues to not immediately rule out music as an option (an increasingly common instinct among publicans).
The prevalence of some enteric pathogens is higher in immature animals, and most public farm animal venues prefer to exhibit young animals.
As with many zoonotic disease problems, veterinarians are a critical public health resource regarding the safety of farm animal venues.
Visitors to public farm animal venues are often unaware of the potential risks associated with animal contact.
There are few rundown areas that might provide venues for punk shows or low-cost housing for punks.
Many early venues did not even have a licensed bar.
Commercial radio formats are replicated within venues, with strict divisions between audiences, genres and performance practices.
The performances are situated in public venues; they are shared.
Research venues will range from research-station trials and farm plots to full catchments and landscapes (with appropriate linkage between them).
Also, the venue's height of 3.4 m was less than ideal for the hanging of stage lights.
Today, virtually all the companies tour, but it is a new kind of touring in that they visit only the festival towns and venues.
Instead, professional associations have come to resemble political parties as venues of expression, mobilization, and engagement with state officials.
More important, it overlooks the possibility that there may be alternative venues to consolidate national identity, culture, and movement in semi and nonindustrialized societies.
The existence of multiple venues of action allows the modern social self to make choices according to contexts.
Emotional disturbance had a more ambiguous etiology and was a term more often found in popular venues.
The suburban rock pub of the 1970s crystallised a complex relationship between audiences, performers and venues.
Tightening of laws governing internal decor - paint fire ratings, fire-retardant furniture - further questioned the appropriateness of some sites as entertainment venues.
While direct sales have provided some relief to small-scale farmers in recent years, some farmers are denied access because venues are filled or simply unavailable.
What kind of venues would show these films?
In addition, the town's inns may also have offered suitable venues.
The paper begins with a general discussion of policy venues and their relationship to policy change.
Policy venues enhance stability in a system for many of the reasons cited above.
Second, advocacy groups choose venues not only to advance substantive policy goals but also to serve organizational needs and identities.
The concerts take place in the palaces of the princely residence and other historic venues in the region.
We found that at the venues where the predominant genre was ballroom, participants criticised other dancers and did not identify themselves with a group.
They supplied important, and uniquely male, venues for politicized socializing.
Adhering to the existing guidelines would unquestionably minimize zoonotic pathogen transmission at these venues, if fully implemented.
In this study the focus groups took place at two different venues geographically convenient for participants.
Even when the regime faced external payment obligations, it was able to access new external venues of revenue.
Where anonymity was requested, interview venues and dates 13 only are given.
Shows take place in these venues, usually in remote areas of the city.
Their preference for provincial venues, and then international ones, was understandable.
The result may be that advocacy groups spend years targeting institutional venues that consistently provide little in the way of significant policy change.
What factors affect an interest group's capacity to act within, and thus its subsequent targeting of, particular institutional venues to pursue social reform?
How and why do interest groups target different venues to achieve their objectives?
As a result, he became interested in working-class culture, designing pieces not just for the concert-hall, but for factory spaces and similar venues.
Conversely, advocacy groups may bypass or overlook opportunities in venues that they have dismissed as unpromising.
In short, the use of particular venues matters to advocacy groups because of the message it conveys to their members, the public, and potential allies.
The larger, well-known venues operated within a landscape of blatant licensing/building law ignorance, corruption and lax policing.
Containment of excessive drinking cultures also began to be established within the venues themselves.
Australian rock histories have produced no comfortable fit of performers and venues.
We must take our music out of the concert halls and into alternative venues such as art galleries and public art spaces.
Early tours like this created a nexus of promoters, venues and places to stay that continues to support touring bands today.
A line recording is one which has been recorded directly from a connection to the venue's sound system, meaning that there is no intrusive audience noise on the tape.
The groups also bypassed some venues altogether due to a lack of faith in the willingness or capacity of certain institutional actors to enact policy change.
He is open about the tacit research bargain he struck: he contributed writing skills and access to publishing venues, while the participants contributed autobiographical data and interview time.
The halls of the civic ground, distinct venues shared by the school and the community, are linked by the exterior landscape between the site boundary and the school buildings.
Policy discussion groups offer venues through which members of the economic elite and producer groups can develop specific policy ideas that are technically sound and compatible with existing state capacities.
His broad and deep knowledge that extended far outside science into the realms of literature and music made him an enjoyable companion in many different venues.
Interested volunteers were invited to three free information events (step 8), which were held in well-known local city centre public venues with reasonable transport and good physical access.
Policy venues may be traditional governmental institutions, such as the legislature, executive agencies, and the courts, or different levels of government (local, state, national, and international).
Thus, in addition to bringing issues to global venues, environmental groups are creating new international institutions and norms that are bound to reshape forestry conflicts in the future.
As noted earlier, it is the presence of organized national parties that allows me to posit the presence of a single set of combatants across otherwise diverse electoral venues.
If these groups have a pattern of litigation losses, then it does not follow that they have lesser or greater advantage in other venues such as legislatures.
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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