词汇 | example_english_crowd |
释义 | Examples of crowdThese 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. There is more to receiving than needing : theoretical arguments and empirical explorations of crowding in and crowding out. The crowd's energy screamed a tweaked anticipation but the mass amounts of uniforms - police, security, ambulance and fire marshal - caused severe anxiety. Workers crowded into tenements constructed around central patios ; these patios served as kitchen, bathing area and dining room for large numbers of residents. Of the various potential risk factors, crowding has a strong and significant association with seropositivity. As a result, serotypes tend to cluster within families, spreading especially in situations of upper respiratory infections and crowding [15]. Flowing waters or teeming crowds: mental models of electricity. Instead, agricultural capitalism, introduced into the province earlier than industrial capitalism, crowded out smallholders. Consequently, the crowding out can only occur during the transition. With crowding reduced, these grow and trigger a second antibody response, and so forth. After retirement, the risk-less annuity crowds out all bond holdings. I wander out into the still busy square, where crowds are still cheering, conscious of the danger of the spectacle that attracts, flatters, and distorts. With their central location, f lashy window cases, and large signs, cigarette stores themselves were a constant adver tisement for the crowds that passed by. However, crowding out will only occur to the extent that compliance with these norms is the only motivation for supporting older people. Taking co-residence into account the international comparison does not support the crowding out hypothesis. There were pickpockets and other villains who are attracted by crowds, although they tended to congregate more in the taverns than at the theatres. Descriptions of meetings, demonstrations, strikes, or even violent crowds, rarely contain specific reference to women or to individuals as women. There among the crowds, however, was the figure of his father to whom he clung happily. In light of the nowprevalent view that global economic integration ' crowds out ' the state, this link between economic openness and domestic interventionism seems counterintuitive. In this type, the trees are small, more or less crowded, and present a stunted and gnarled appearance. Counting, except of crowds and heaps, is less contentious. The relatively high crowding coefficient values indicated yield advantages from mixed cropping of the two species. An endeavour was made to rear both types under crowded and uncrowded conditions. His home may have been crowded with treasures, but it was his art collection that she was investigating. Why should the stimulus for this complete change in behaviour be crowding? They are not crowded together in a fold of hurdles. He drew large, friendly crowds, and thought this proved support for both his presidency and the new law. The strongest hints of these attitudes crop up in the language used to describe crowds. Authors feared the potential for violence and disorder but stopped shor t of condemning the crowd's actions. In the initial period of the shock, investment increases sharply while consumption is crowded out. In the bedlam, the crowds torched various buildings and vehicles throughout the city. The identifying variable in this analysis was crowding in the unit, namely, the number of patients already in the unit at the time of triage. During drying, solute concentration and molecular crowding increase in the cytoplasm. The issue here is the value associated with maneuverability within the crowds. Individuals in crowds, it was argued, lost their reason and yielded to instinct. Lovers were drunk with emotion, crowds acted in a drunken frenzy, and drink freed the tongue to talk. Because of the huge data of the work scene video, the communication channel used to be crowded. On its crowded stage the characters are even less three-dimensional (sc. more onedimensional). However, the dense population of the industrial regions lived in towns which were unusually crowded together and which had not developed conventional hierarchical structures. From crowding into the library to witness the fun, intending spectators had to view or hear the proceedings from outside the door. Free outdoor events for the large crowds included music concerts, roving performances, and dance, physical theatre, and new circus shows. She noted with concern the ' ' idle crowds ' ' and abandoned children roaming the streets bordered by run-down buildings in desperate need of repair. Flocking is used in these instances as a way for crowds to follow paths determined using by pathfinding routines. Capacity in downstream industries must be monitored to ensure no crowding out effects are caused by the import of waste. They demanded the local authorities took a stronger stance against the preachers, while becoming increasingly critical of the crowds. Let historians browse into those dusty pages crowded with species descriptions; our trade's tools and goals have moved to quite more serious ground. The crowding intensity appeared to be negatively correlated with the per capita consumption rate of bark. Perhaps a better financial situation gave children and their old parents the opportunity to live independently instead of crowding in with relatives. When either reciprocity or affection for the individual are the main driving factors, crowding out will not take place. Our data suggest that the crowding out hypothesis must be rejected. Taken together, the findings largely support the hypotheses of ' crowding in' and ' mixed responsibility'. As both factions moved to gain a hold on power, the crowds suddenly and unexpectedly took to the streets. Conditions there were crowded for them, and they began to look for land on which to star t a new village and farm. An examination of the effects of crowding and noise in the home. Evidence of efficiency gains have been crowded out by unease over restructuring. His charisma drew enormous crowds wherever he went to speak, and all his speeches and policy pronouncements were covered widely in the press. The ultimate measure of crowding in childhood is represented by bed sharing. However, if young people have crowded homes and no privacy, what can they do ? In addition to lettuce, we found crowding to increase the risk of typhoid fever. Identically wing-clipped females were crowded at the same time with members of their own strain and used as controls. Table 9 shows the alteration of hydrocarbon profile of females of the two pure strains and of females subjected to crowding experiments. Other risk factors examined were size of the daycare centre and play group, time spent in day-care, and household characteristics (size, composition, crowding, smoking). The most that can be said about some crowds is that they consisted predominantly - or, at least, originally - of residents from the same neighborhood. Having recognized that the "people" might resor t to violence, how did contemporaries understand the motives of crowds? Even at the height of their passions, crowds were caref ul to present themselves as the guardians of community values. Not only is physical capital crowded out by government debt but human capital as well, so that the growth potential of the economy is affected. Pension funds could trade frequently, increasing the liquidity of the domestic stock markets, and thus crowding in savings and new investors. The hour bus trip transforms them from a world of noise and crowded cement sidewalks into a world of green grass, forests, and lakes. Many things - crowds, flying objects, clothes fitting too tight, nausea, as well as feelings translatable as psychiatric symptoms - can 'strike' a person. Another study considered how punishment crowds out ethical obligations implied by the social contract. Many aspects of hydrogeology from groundwater levels to contamination are becoming increasingly important in these small crowded isles. I disliked the small single-columned fragments of text below diagrams where it is crowded and easily initially overlooked by the reader. Peddling and restocking goods are usually put off until louma day, when gathering crowds cause transaction costs to plummet. Open spaces gave way to ones crowded with interacting technological, social, political, market, symbolic, and other human-built systems. There is no doubt that music occasionally bound large crowds together. The method is especially suitable in cases where the robots are crowded at their starting and goal configurations. A close connection between alcohol consumption and unr uly conduct by crowds attending the polls was commonly understood. The effect of the fugues' many thick passages is like being at a crowded party where everyone is talking loudly at once. The invisible crowds we have spoken of, we shall conclude that some of them have disappeared completely, and others in large part. Seeing the large and extremely interested crowds thrilled and delighted me. Empirical research has rarely supported the assumption that public transfers, such as old-age social security or income payments, have crowded out private transfers. Feeding a human population that increasingly crowds a fragile planet. The crowds were small, no more than several hundred people. Private projects are crowded out and the revenue of the remaining ones falls. If this is true, all we can say is that the effects of crowding in seem to be stronger overall than those of crowding out. There is small comfort in being crowded out by ghosts. Understandably, these crowds became rather hostile following the proclamation, making their dissolution all the more critical. Their needs could in some degree be crowded out by the more urgent and enforceable priorities of the state. The degree of crowding in these lodgings is difficult to estimate, for we do not always know the exact number of inmates. They require numerous, direct, legible well-paced routes offering choices of experience (quiet and green, crowded and bright and so on). By perpetuating poverty in rural areas they encouraged population movement to crowded cities and to ecologically fragile uplands. Increases in costs as a function of stocks may be due to crowding, which makes selective cutting difficult. The second point relates to the crowding out effect of imported waste. When predators are searching in an aphid colony, a number of potential cues are available that are not present when aphids are crowded. In addition, the effects of crowding and starvation were studied in separate experiments. In particular, the text seems to be a worthwhile (because it is different) contribution to the crowded seed textbook market place. Even as it is, things are too crowded, so we'll have to ration access in some way, whether by auction, waiting lines, or lottery. She knew them in crowds passing to and from their nests, like ants or beetles. Huge crowds surged round the car demanding books, baptism, confirmation and more teachers. 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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