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词汇 example_english_clue
释义

Examples of clue


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.
The study investigated the effectiveness of (1) a general strategy, (2) recognition and interpretation of specific context clues, and (3) practice with feedback.
Infants' ability to consult the speaker for clues to word reference.
Nonetheless, it is possible to approach this issue by determining cellular and subcellular localization of the protein which may provide clues to its function.
Thus, many endogenous groups do have clues in locating their potential members.
One distinctive feature which should provide clues to the sources of human infection is seasonality.
Present clues on the composition of organic refractories and silicates will be given.
First, we think that it is necessary to discuss the different clues for life that could be relevant as biosignatures.
No record exists, of course, that makes it possible to determine early human behaviour, so anatomical remains provide the best clues.
In the case of maple trees, the characteristic shapes of their leaves offer natural rather than artificial clues for recognizing perceived trees as maples.
Valuable clues about infracommunity dynamics may be gained by using co-occurrence patterns in component communities.
Fluctuations in the magnitude of the seasonal variation of births over time may provide clues to its aetiology.
Fluctuations in the magnitude of the seasonal variation may provide clues to its aetiology.
Identifying risk factors such as childhood adversities can often uncover important clues as to the aetiology of a disorder.
The clues that participants give to suggest that dance can aid in counteracting the marginalization of their situation are there in a variety of instances.
The first approach is based on the observation that partial utterances provide clues for possible choices for completion.
There's lots of clues as to why there's three.
The changing interiors of nineteenth-century theatres thus provide rich clues for changing modes of bourgeois self-representation and identity.
Studying as much of the play as possible for clues to character can also be fruitful.
Lear ners can be helped to cope with technical vocabular y by developing recognition of textual clues, including definitions and repetition.
Subjects in the exper imental g roup, third-, fourthand fifth-g raders, were taught two categor ies of context clues, "cause-effect" and "direct descr iption".
However, the bibliographies at the ends of chapters provide useful clues for interested readers, especially helpful for outsiders who do not know where to begin.
They provide clues to where the system's strengths and weaknesses lie - providing guidance for future development.
First, we have to decide what kind of clues are available for the individuals in the population.
Weighted alignment clues are used as independent indicators for a possible association between lexical items.
However, the subcellular cerebral localization of pannexin proteins which could gain first clues on their putative function remained unknown.
However, there are other clues for choosing a nonterminal, and we almost never know if this is the best choice.
The relative size of the segments of the elites provides some initial clues about the character of post-communist government.
Other clues about skill come from traits that suggest shor tcuts in forming and finishing.
The ethnohistoric and ethnographic literature provides additional clues to the meaning of these deposits.
Nevertheless, large numbers of easily identifiable bone fragments gave us clues to the general orientation of the deposits.
Their contents and syntax-and the modification of these patterns -provide clues as to how individual subjects were viewed, and they may even reflect underlying ideology.
He thereby also eliminated the internal clues that would have enabled an accurate dating of the work.
There are not the same clues in relation to size that there are with children's clothes.
In other words, a strong belief in context is associated with (a) less use of kanji clues and (b) a weaker ability to integrate information.
Teachers also need to know the types of students who benefit from multiple clues and the types who do not.
First, it examines the extent to which the integration of contextual and kanji clues generally yields better guesses, compared with ones involving a single source.
Finally, to compound the lack of order throughout the book, the contents page gives few clues to the chapters' subjects and there is no index.
We can only gather clues through experience and hope that they lead us closer to ourselves.
In such cases, however, less is not more - the wider the searches, the more readily cross-checking and clues to authenticity can be provided.
Information derived from studies on other bruchids may provide clues to the answers to these questions.
In any case, further research on how bilingual children use various clues in understanding that there are two languages in their input is needed.
To tease out the relevant variables, future research on children's ®rst clues to understanding the existence of two input languages might compare different input conditions.
Ideally, doctors should master the art of delivering information by understanding culturally specific clues.
Her family, prior professional caregivers, and medical records provided clues.
A detailed examination of dowries provides clues as to the property owned by newlyweds and how co-operation between the generations operated in practice.
Even adult speech that adheres to adult standards may furnish no clues or only tenuous ones.
They also offer clues as to how students learnt to read music.
He suggests that, as a result, economists have missed some valuable clues to understanding priority and to seeing how it differs from equality.
A problem of defining the expanded class of prepositions is that it lacks mor phological clues.
In inter preting factuality, it is thus necessary to rely on contextual and constructional clues of various kinds.
Clinical genetic input is often required as the family history or parental examination may yield valuable clues to the diagnosis.
Only definition clues (three of them the same!) are given for them.
They do so by using the linguistic and situational clues at their disposal.
The definition parts of these clues are to the resultant two-word expressions, the other parts to the word to be entered.
The carapace of cambriids provides few clues to their mode of life.
The study of viruses in extreme environments may yield some clues.
Infants' ability to consult the speaker for clues to word references.
Criterial evidence will come from distribution, frequency, and potential semantic information, though there may be other clues as well.
Starting to talk worse : clues to language acquisition from children's late speech errors.
A better understanding of this seasonal pattern could provide important clues to the aetiology of human campylobacter infection.
We are "subsidiarily aware" of clues and tools, while we are "focally aware" of that toward which our attention is directed.
Secondly, how can such a discovery be identified using clues provided by the available sources?
As we shall see, there is a point in the history of the research program, around 1995, when the clues undergo a wholesale revision.
Entries (findings) are relatively permanent and it is the clues (hypotheses and loose ends) that can change.
If vision is poor these clues are lost and understanding speech becomes more difficult.
Identification of aetiological clues provides targets for disease modification.
Human diseases : clues to cracking the connexin code ?
While we found many clues that suggested we could so isolate it, there remain many questions about its implications.
We then used morphological clues to correlate signature and presumptive morphological bipolar cell types.
Moreover, study of the rd-3 mutation might also lead to clues for therapies to prolong photoreceptor survival in human disease.
Significantly longer reaction times are to be seen as clues for resistance.
The misogamist tradition of the medieval schools provided no clues.
The technical vocabulary is different from our own, therefore the knowledge of practical procedures may provide clues to concepts expressed in source texts.
At the same time, the method of clueing the reader in at the expense of the characters is much more direct.
Still, altogether they may provide the reader with some clues respecting the lines along which a principled solution to the above questions might develop.
A synthesis of these speculative responses may yield some clues as to what a whole "real" ar tifact system is.
Clinical genetics as clues to the "real" genetics of schizophrenia (a decade of modest gains while playing for time).
Details of how these preferences operate contain clues about the selection pressures that shaped them.
Watching the video with the score was the obvious place, but again few clues on integration and application were offered.
Each emotion group is introduced and demonstrated by a short video clip giving some clues for later analysis of the emotions in this group.
In other words, kanji users' gain from the two sources combined was no better than their gain from the kanji clues alone.
Nevertheless, both the diversity of offering constituents and the quantity offered provide clues about the social status of the individuals interred in the tomb.
In this way, architecture always clues inhabitants in on how they might occupy it.
Thus, careful scrutiny of gene expression patterns can give clues as to potential function.
A retrospective study immediately following failed to turn up any clues.
The structural clues presumably complement their use of ontological information.
We do not merely encounter clues as to what persons are thinking, mere signs or manifestations, but the persons themselves.
The allusions create clues enough, and we need not unpack them as we go.
If it does exist the gene may help resolve some of the questions about how antibiotics work and give clues for new antibiotics.
The connections of cortical areas may give some clues about homology.
An analysis of the origins of partnerships, their supporters and sponsors, gives some important clues in the diagnosis of the development of partnerships to date.
While comprehensive data will always be elusive, a myriad of partial and indirect clues now support these broad conclusions.
There may be a mix within that and there can be subtle visual clues that they are not all the same.
When we lack the clues or the wherewithal, identity remains cloaked.
In other words, they provide clues as to the possible attributes for which genes might code (through their gene products).
Tracking the role of the family environment in the expression of genetic influence on antisocial behavior provides clues to what might be inherited.
Such accounts provide important clues toward understanding the etiology of specific cognitive impairments in populations with identifiable genetic disorders.
The first three waves of resilience research provide crucial clues to "hot spots" for multilevel work.
In turn, this relationship provides valuable indirect clues for a hypothetical reconstruction of this repertory, previously hindered by the enormous loss of source material.
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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