词汇 | example_english_weave |
释义 | Examples of weaveThese 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. Again he offers a taut telling of a familiar story, weaving together above all the histories of policy, economics and society. The combined effect was increasing specialization and division of labour, in particular, a gradual separation of weaving from wool production and wool trade. Although given a separate chapter, the mechanics governing thrustbelt deformation is a theme which is woven throughout the book. Picks were generally flattened on one side and were used in weaving to lift the warp to create intricate patterns. A special process called weaving merg es programs written in these languag es to produce the resulting system. All these are intricately woven in ten chapters - introduction, eight substantive chapters and conclusion. As can be seen from definitions (8), weaving not only consists of putting in parallel, but also in synchronising common output symbols. He weaves close, detailed analyses of several different linguistic phenomena into a book that coheres tightly. Most importantly, it was the weaving family that determined how work was allocated within the household, not some outside set of actors. The rapid expansion of weaving boosted the status and skill of weavers. Most had once been weavers and still retained a high degree of weaving skill. The war demand forced a rapid expansion in weaving capacity in the mills. In the mills they used to work in the spinning and weaving departments. She also found that women spun, and presumably wove, maguey and cotton in both commoner and elite households. Most of the labourers also wove linen for him. The report helps us to appreciate that while weaving continued, it was dyeing that flourished in this new era. He weaves structuralist interpretations of settlement layouts, cognitive systems and symbolism into his account, without according such factors any causal role in history. A thread in several responses wove around the trap we termed programmatic thinking. Furthermore, the book weaves in a wide range of ideas and issues from different branches of science. Strands of socialist politics and modernist aesthetic austerity were also woven into the circle's discussions. The emphasis is upon empirical evidence, and a large body of source material has been woven in. Yards and yards of cable were woven through the trees. In this tapestry are woven together threads representing pedagogy, assessment, industry requirements and practitioner sophistication. Spirit is the regenerative power of these circulatory flows which, in living organisms, are bound into tightly woven bundles or tissues of extraordinary complexity. More specifically in the textile industry, this meant that crafts like weaving, dyeing and finishing were almost always done by men. Interlacing solos shape the fabric of this serene, contemplative slow movement, weaving a fragile, kaleidoscopic skein of gossamer beauty. Although the economic boom ended in 1920, weaving mills thereafter required an increasing number of women. Seen from the perspective of the co-opted and bureaucratized movement member, tension, ambivalence, opposition, and conflict is woven into the entanglement. Learning about other theological orientations is inextricably woven with the understanding that all other maslaks are misleading, if not altogether wrong. The cotton weaving situation sheds light on this problem. The workshops processed maguey, made spindle whorls, spun thread of various sizes, including cordage, and perhaps cloth was woven and dyed in these workshops. The raw jute passed through six different departments of a factory called batching, softening, preparing, spinning, weaving and sewing. At least in the records the poor were few and far between before 1590 when they were kept busy spinning and weaving wool. Her approach is original, weaving analysis, reports of her own interviews and surveys and poetry and literary narratives. Descriptions are woven through the generative history of a design; created, composed, and discarded. In the neighbouring villages many coarse blankets, or cumlies, are woven from the wool which the country produces. Simultaneously, the instances of families who reared sheep, sold wool, spun yarn, and wove it, became increasingly rare. However, the entire document is woven with a sustained thread of medical ethics throughout its other sections. On the other hand, the women who were non-heirs, the cabaleres, wove important networks of social relationships. He weaves elements of his own biography through the arguments of the book. The relationships formed an intricately patterned fabric woven by different hands at different times. In contrast, cotton weaving continued to function under the putting-out system. Nonetheless, it is an important string that is woven into every veil. In contrast, the number of households weaving cloth remained relatively unchanged during this period. 2 supports this interpretation with the results of a series of carefully designed weaving experiments. We do not understand how dreaming comes about, how memories and concepts are so intriguingly woven to form the narrative of the dream. The mental fusing of the two slightly different views weaves an expanded stereoscopic veil. The real and the imaginary can be woven seamlessly in electroacoustic sound imagery. In this type of consolidation, all stages of production, processing and distribution are woven tightly together to ensure reliable, efficient product delivery15. What is new and exciting about astrobiology is that it weaves biology, chemistry, and humanity into the adventure. Undoubtedly, the ease with which they wove elements of their daily lives into their religious experiences reflects the practices of the wider population. She considers weaving as a full-time activity, even though she helps in farm operations. The tightly woven cell layers of the pericarp are also barriers to gases. Again, he links experiences to the city, weaving his reminiscences with glimpses of the buildings and monuments they pass. Earlier, the shepherds themselves wove wool to a large extent. No, it's an informal kind of courtyard which inter weaves, interlocks with the surroundings. Women are good at weaving and dying fabric. The economic significance of textiles can be explored, in part, by the archaeological identification and distribution of production tools: spinning and weaving implements. Both are common in the north tomb offerings while they are relatively rare (straight) and absent (woven) in the south tomb. The 'independent' weaving family was rarely in a position to secure favourable terms under such conditions. Second, most tended to specialize in weaving rather than to divide their work time between agriculture and the handloom. Although yarn continued to be reeled for the dyers, weaving departments largely took their yarn unreeled. The teacher shows students how the carpet looks from the underside, and facilitates the students in weaving their own. Additionally, since the taiko-bata continued to be commonly used, the labour productivity of weaving cloth did not increase. They danced alone or with a partner, weaving and bobbing across the floor. The inequality of power relations weaves into the fabric of all social networks, including inter-generational relationships. As long as young couples wove silk gauze together, the regular provision of employment was guaranteed. The old and new threads with which the new social fabric was woven are described, but in a fashion which leaves loose ends. Descriptions are woven through the generative history of a design; created, composed and discarded. Strong production data based on a sixfold classification of management systems are expertly woven into the argument. The author has collected a wealth of epidemiological facts and has woven them into a complex matrix of other historical data. Savings from weaving are used to buy food and fund farming operations and vice versa. Contemporaries were aware of the webs trade weaved. Two threads can be woven here into the argument. As such, they would serve as useful resource in weaving a long-durée stor y of chemistry in history. The welfare state, as an integrated part of the modern economy, weaves through diverse sectors and public organisations. All you have to do is to define a function that weaves a web. Voice inserts itself without regard for cognition and will, perforating the metaphysical by weaving in and out of bodies. At one point, we were told that the delegation was in one of the weaving factories. Despite similar thematic choices for their portrayals of widows including marriage, family, religion, weaving and household reproduction, there is much divergence between these two works. The chapter weaves together short summaries of existing studies on stress development and theoretical issues in stress representation. By 1918 in both countries, the reform of work practices in the cotton weaving industry remained in its infancy. Steaming involved adding artificial heat and humidity to cotton weaving rooms. The sinuous, weaving thread of the piano holds the line through the complex orchestral labyrinth. The piece itself was full of beautiful moments, and showed skill in weaving together rich and volatile passages for orchestra. The nests are intricate structures beautifully woven by the male birds, who then display on them to attract females to the nest. When phenomenology discovers the conditions of experience, including cognition, it always finds formal, objective, and historical elements woven together in semiosis. Often local craftsmen and women exhibit their talents, such as spinning, corn-dolly making and weaving. They are instruments for national survival and should be woven into the whole fabric of the primary school curriculum. His reformulation was woven around three key points. With or without farms, weavers were independent master craftsmen not directly employed by the clothiers whose yarn they wove. Secondary fallow weaves into and out of the baseline, becoming more significant as forests disappear. In a biography proper, however, all these aspects would have been woven together in a chronological development. The rapid increase in cloth production per household or per capita implies that domestic weavers devoted an increasing proportion of their working hours to weaving. In weaving these networks, politicians, factions and parties valued those who could command and deliver every additional vote. All of these artifacts can be related to weaving, netting, or cloth in some way. A few specimens show evidence of having been woven, but fragments of this size might not be expected to provide such evidence. Not all of these themes, sub-divided into the nine chapters, are tidily woven together. He takes on a wider area and weaves a whole range of processes in a truly political economy perspective. 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. |
反思网英语在线翻译词典收录了377474条英语词汇在线翻译词条,基本涵盖了全部常用英语词汇的中英文双语翻译及用法,是英语学习的有利工具。