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词汇 example_english_cautious
释义

Examples of cautious


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.
Accordingly, their physicians are generally more cautious and less inclined to 'switch-over' to new brands unless proved to be absolutely essential or decidedly superior.
Coupled with the volume's empirical breadth, this cautious optimism helps make the authors' arguments both honest and valuable.
We must be cautious in attributing motivation to an observed behaviour.
The political decision process in 1992 resulted in a pragmatic and cautious approach when spelling out the details of the reform.
We must therefore be cautious in the conclusions we draw from this review of notes of patient contacts.
Second, the author maintains a direct yet cautious tone throughout the book.
With oral sources, in particular, the historian must remain extremely cautious.
We need, then, to be cautious about approaching such marginal annotation as obvious evidence of reading practice and intellectual meaning.
While cautious of the sample size underpinning these conclusions, it was also found that consistent trustees had at least undergraduate education and relevant professional qualifications.
We were cautious with our dosing schedule f or fear of prec ipitating an ag itated delir ium but observed no evidence to suggest this.
We must be cautious, however, since the plan type affects the types of workers attracted to a firm.
In such cases, a cautious tokenizer produces alternative segmentations postponing the decision to a later processing stage.
In our numerical example, the cost of allowing the other central bank to learn dominates so optimal monetary policy strategy is cautious.
Active learning in the absence of coordination gives central banks an incentive to follow cautious strategies, thereby slowing learning and avoiding conflict.
In providing an answer to the other two questions she has a tendency (wisely) to be cautious and equivocates (p. 251).
However, discrepancies observed on risk factors with small effects should make researchers cautious about such effects if based on recall data.
Unions' responses to the reform proposals ranged from cautious acceptance to strong criticism.
All the articles presented in this special issue have a very sceptical and cautious approach to the notions of ' top' and ' down'.
Cautious monotonicity is very conservative and is therefore probably not that useful in a practical setting.
A conservative and cautious estimate is that around 15-25 per cent of employees combine caregiving and working.
One must therefore be cautious in interpreting and generalising the results.
His answers to these important questions seem far too cautious and limited on several grounds.
Our unit is most cautious in the use of banding of the pulmonary trunk for the reasons articulated above.
The cautious approach, on the contrary, entails that there are cases in which comparisons between action alternatives would be immoral.
Although these results seem obvious, we are cautious with these suggestions, especially because the findings are not supported by the results on the other tasks.
As we have seen, not all linguists would be so cautious and deferential.
We have learnt to be cautious about unconsciously applying metaphors from one level to another.
In conclusion, test developers need to be cautious in generalizing score equivalency research findings to constructed response items.
Perhaps the more cautious reverse order would have dampened the beginner's ardour for the subject?
Note, that this cautious measure may lead to underestimating the errors in the corpora.
By implication, it is necessary to be cautious before inferring that the production of a single syllable from a multisyllabic target reflects single syllable extraction.
The new path is hidden from the known sentry but is still cautious from the unknown ones, as compared to the short path.
However, one must be cautious in interpreting epidemiological research, for several reasons.
Naturally, clinicians are uncomfortable with uncertainty, and this promotes cautious behavior.
However, we must be cautious about drawing rigorous conclusions from such comparisons.
Suppose that these consequentialists agree that the cautious but willing sheriff's action maximizes good consequences, and hence is the right action.
A school is a place where adolescents are cautious about revealing their personal music.
All the same, there are reasons to be cautious - even sceptical - about their policy statements on the social policy advantages of faith-based organisations.
Today, however, only a cautious pessimism is permissible with regard to the state of affairs in the region as a whole.
We take the more cautious position which acknowledges that adverbs are rigidly ordered with respect to each other, but not necessarily with respect to objects.
Second, while we must be cautious about attributing causation, foreign assistance appears to have a positive association with these welcome political trends.
On the other hand, developed countries that grow relatively faster should be cautious in using bonds to raise money.
The pace of democratic change has slowed, making it difficult to distinguish democratic stagnation from cautious gradualism.
They point, however, to the need for a cautious interpretation of the observations reported here.
One should be cautious about reading too much into such statistical analyses.
In this note we establish that order-consistency guarantees another nice property: cautious monotonicity.
However, it is necessary to be cautious when drawing conclusions regarding this effect.
One must be cautious in attempts to generalize from any sample to a larger population.
One needs to be cautious in inferring function from structure.
The complexity of cautious reasoning follows by similar arguments as above.
A more cautious approach to this issue, however, would be to focus on the ultimate fate of these fertilised dysmorphic oocytes.
However, these results warrant a cautious examination of the potential for using buttress morphometrics as an indicator of disturbance regimes in tropical forests.
There are a number of reasons to be cautious about the relationship between working memory and parsing performance.
When doing so inside the local markets, the presence of duty officials forced farmers to be very cautious.
Hence, there is every reason to be cautious before jumping to conclusions such as those of some of the above critics.
There is a propensity to be unnecessarily cautious and the decision to release a variety is ultimately one of comparing relative risks.
The foregoing observations raise some speculative possibilities, particularly with regard to environmental regulation, which would lead us to be cautious in doing so.
Other objectors were more cautious and more inventive.
Although problems of under-reporting hinder our interpretation of laboratory surveillance data, they do not entirely prevent a cautious analysis of these data.
One must be cautious, however, in interpreting these dominance estimates.
Their election manifesto had been detailed but cautious about radical change - no 'new crusade' here, either material or spiritual.
Once again, it must be emphasized that cautious interpretation and further replication of these findings is warranted.
The punchline is that we must be cautious about naïvely assuming that our experiences resemble the world.
One must be cautious, because the sample is not large enough to support a robust analysis of correlations.
British historians tend to be more cautious when considering the interaction between public subsidy and cinematographic 'vitality'.
Should utilitarians be cautious about an infinite future?
High scorers tend to endorse social norms, act in a cautious and restrained manner, and avoid thrills.
Thus, generalizing findings to anxiety disorders should be cautious.
My cautious conclusion is that euthanasia is indeed rejected on ethical and religious grounds although occasional cases undoubtedly occur.
As a general introduction to the figures following, it should be mentioned that they are to be interpreted as cautious approximations.
However, we should be cautious when evaluating and interpreting such data.
A solver generated according to this extension is cautious in the sense that it will not prune the search space for any unknown tuple.
In our view, the patient data on this point are not particularly strong and one needs to be cautious in making inferences from small databases.
To my knowledge, these individuals do not have more frequent nightmares than cautious persons who avoid all danger.
The strength of this cautious approach is that it allows him to show how environmental conditions are contingent on specific social and natural processes.
One has to be very cautious in making claims from the results obtained from only two participants.
As we will discuss in section 3.2, a cautious learner may converge on the target grammar very slowly or not at all.
Here, however, he might have been more cautious in distinguishing between what happened and how alumni or chroniclers remembered the episodes.
Doctors should therefore be cautious about making the diagnosis in the absence of clear information.
The text's beautiful, delicate, cautious, and painstaking calligraphy is equally encoded with ethical implications.
Selecting the most restrictive framework (among those appropriate) clearly corresponds to adopting a sort of 'cautious approach' in interpreting the agent's thought.
Contrary to traditional grammar, a more cautious outlook on language is provided.
Limitations of the study dictate cautious interpretation of the results, and the need for replication studies.
The results from the statistical limb of the study also require cautious interpretation.
The exploratory nature of this investigation makes cautious interpretation of our findings necessary.
Often, however, a survey is more cautious and exploratory, and ideas are not firm enough to generate a specific hypothesis.
He is therefore cautious about purchasing more services.
Many proposed projects provided little or no guarantee of generating convertible currencies, and this made banks cautious in their approach to such projects.
During the last decade a more cautious and sceptical generation of historians has tended to deconstruct or even detonate the blocks themselves.
Low effect sizes for the neurophysiological results require very cautious interpretations of the data and necessitate replication before firm conclusions are warranted.
We must be cautious in generalizing these findings beyond the areas we have studied for several reasons.
We must be cautious in our application of typological knowledge to historical linguistics.
The lack of personnel and specialized instruction were the main reason for this cautious approach.
The findings of recent research by early modernists suggest that one should be cautious about making such an assumption.
In sum, more research and a cautious interpretation in the meantime are certainly needed.
Statisticians, perhaps characteristically, have been cautious about causality, at least until relatively recently.
One should be cautious not to romanticize poor and nonindustrial people as earth friendly and ecologically responsible.
On the other hand, the small number of patients in this study population mandates cautious interpretation of the results.
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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