词汇 | example_english_confuse |
释义 | Examples of confuseThese 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. As it develops, especially in the second half of the century, the picture becomes increasingly variegated, scrambled, and confused. First, the absence of evidence of any positive effects for an experimental variable should not be confused with evidence of absence of such effects. He is soon, however, hopelessly confused in attempts to distinguish between capital to the individual and capital to the nation. The confinement rules partition the set of types and prevent types belonging to different partition from being confused with one another. Relatively few demonstrated any informed awareness of the raft of policies outlined above and some that professed understanding were in reality confused or mistaken. Note that occurrences of holes will be filled by reduction contexts and are not to be confused with redex holes. He too insisted that law should not be confused with custom. Furthermore, they were formulated in 1548, before diversity of religion had seriously fragmented policy and confused traditional conflicts. Readers may also find the opening section on geography extremely dry, and the multitude of ethnic groups confusing. Nevertheless, three concepts still appear to be confused, ill-defined, or interchangeable in the literature: reflective practice, reflection, and the reflective practitioner. Not to be confused with the hardware notion of an interrupt, which is more akin to an asynchronous subroutine call. In previous formulations of projection strictness analysis, the two forms of demand were confused (literally) by the lifting trick. Is infant bilingual acquisition fundamentally similar to monolingual acquisition or is it delayed and confused ? Removing it is not to be confused with cleaning a painting from subsequent dirt - noise was there in the original creation of the work. Truth and proof are simply different things, and confusing them leads to epistemic perdition. There are two superficially similar puzzles which should not be confused with our difficulty here. He was confused with the dosage instruction given by the doctor for this hypoglycaemic tablet. I was interested in what was confusing her and listened to her talk. The ability to establish incidences or prevalences for psychosyndromes is confused by varying diagnostic fashions and patterns of service utilization. Professionally led ' support groups ' should not be confused with self-help groups. I fear a beginner would become hopelessly confused without a good grounding in at least one model of psychotherapy. The initial aim was to develop real-time aids to help military aircraft pilots make decisions using incomplete and confusing data from many sources. Other considerations of language, especially of the relationship between language and thought, are confused. Since we will be interested only in the applicative behaviour of ty pe, there is no problem in confusing both. However, even people familiar with lambda calculus are often confused about the proper way of proving this fact. All of these languages are confused in this volume. Of course, current life and historical sources - oral and written discourse - ought not to be confused, and one must not be taken for the other. Models (in this case set-theoretic) are not to be confused with the real world. The primary resonator should not be confused with any secondary or tertiary resonators. The 'objet sonore' should not be confused with the sonic source. Abstraction should not be confused with spiritualism, which is just abstraction from location. The adding of texts together in this discussion in fact confuses the issues. The answer is that he or she would be confused. Later writers added details that they thought would clarify the music but which only confused the issue. If nonlinguists take the trouble to compare their notations, they will almost certainly get confused. No one member can be confused with another. There is far less chance that an intermediate colour could be confused in this way. On the face of it, this may seem confusing. A review of the origins of mites is followed swiftly by a fascinating discussion of their complex and sometimes confusing taxonomy. Thus, it is not implausible to use constructions such as (4a) and (4b) as instances of confusing input. As a consequence, s/he can be confused and may pursue the ' 'wrong' ' syntactic analysis (the one supported by both languages) for some time. The tone of the writing is often political and polemical, steeped in the increasingly selfreferential and sometimes confusing terminology of post-modernist cultural theorizing. Language dominance is easily confused with language proficiency. In each case, one of the three incorrect choices (homophonous error) would be appropriate if the target word were confused with its homophone. The picture that emerges is confused - probably too confused to be confined by a single theoretical approach, which is, actually, one of my points. A previous history of prolonged sepsis related to the surgical scar confused the diagnosis of her acute terminal illness. Why distort and indeed mislead public education and discussion by confusing scientific fact and science fiction? The structure of the book is confusing and its written style is uneven in quality. To have raised, explicitly, the question of sustainability would have confused the issue. The observation of a higher salary should not be confused with our statement about the wage rates, w* w1, as this will still hold. Often many types of similar word pairs are confused with heteronyms. However, as events are repeated, the representations become more general and details are lost or confused among episodes. Details of specific experiences are omitted or confused among episodes. Following ordinary usage, when that usage is confused and mistaken, is not a virtue. Although the authors do not make this error, many readers may be confused on this point. The act of a perceiver and the content of his mind should not be confused. Researchers need to exercise caution about confusing proximate (ecological/ behavioural) and ultimate (evolutionary) functions of dacine lures. However, when one gathers further-thus mixing parities-then the coding gets hopelessly confused. Nevertheless, the reader should not be confused when we talk about admissible weights. Is there a real risk of these two words being confused. Linguists have been confused by campaigns against sexist language: are they prescriptive conspiracies or a kind of natural change? Nevertheless, the teacher, and t h e interested observer, might well feel confused. The force contributions in figure 9 tell the story, but may appear confusing at first. Caretakers may communicate through contradictory and confused verbal and nonverbal messages. As told, it is also manifestly confused in ! He thus constructed a position that allowed him to condemn extremes in apocalyptic terms, but it was a stance that has confused later commentators. While this could prove confusing to the uninitiated, it enables him to provide a depth of analysis which reveals his superior grasp of the material. People get confused about what this book is about. The positive answer (which depends on the way you interpret equations) is folklore, however this is an issue which confuses even experts in the area. Thirdly, the child considers both directions, but is confused. Between the two drawings is a time axis which refers only to the lateral view, thus confusing the observer. Below, they are confused and redistributed and tossed around endlessly. In particular, information must not be confused with meaning. Scale contains 18 items, four relating to mobility, continence and activities of daily living and the remainder to confused behaviour. She was intermittently confused and disorientated and wished to be discharged. They may be confused with complex partial seizures (or vice-versa, see below). Agitated and confused patients may misinterpret their surroundings and try to escape from perceived threat. Mental disability has been broadly defined and could include recognized psychiatric conditions and confused or impaired states following physical illness. Despite the ending '-itis', these conditions are rarely painful, and therefore should not usually be confused with polymyalgia rheumatica. The second is that philosophers might show a practice to be confused without ever saying that it is. There is no looking back; instead, there is an immersion in the infidelities and convulsions of the present that jumbles and confuses the past. They have confused it with another question: small wonder, therefore, if their answer is different from ours. In this respect forgiveness should not be confused with condonation. Indeed, the likeness was so great in the thirteenth century that they could easily be confused. Then there is the case of the floating bar of iron, not to be confused with the needle supported by surface tension. At any time in life he may be confused by what he sees and feels. Certainly this rests on a very narrow concept of description which confuses it with literalism. I suspect that this confuses the growth of sociological studies with rising prevalence. We should not be confused with these two '80%'. Writers almost invariably insist upon ignoring, conflating, or otherwise confusing these implications. With a postal questionnaire, it is important also to check that the layout is neither confusing nor encouraging any particular response. There is another reason for the reluctance to indulge in creative thinking and that is because it is often confused with original thought. When not confusing rank and class, fashion could also threaten individuality through standardisation. I will employ 'marked nominative' as less potentially confusing than 'extended ergative'. The concrete universal should not be confused either with the abstract universal or with allegory. 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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