词汇 | example_english_decisive |
释义 | Examples of decisiveThese 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. Nevertheless, communicative language teaching does not provide a decisive definition of 'good language use'. In most countries, however, friendship, (social) health, and education are the decisive indicators. The political appeal of majority rule may be decisive for both camps, holding constant the actual supermajoritarian effect of the rules. The other set of four-party decisive structures involves all four parties being pivotal. Alternatively, a smaller subset of the citizens may be decisive, as in the case of an oligarchy or personalistic regime. Secondly, and more importantly, leaders in these nations worked within political institutions that gave them the opportunity to exercise decisive authority. A third or fourth ally would not have produced any significant modification once this decisive modification had occurred. The decisive qualities are rank/wings ; looks ; money ; youth in that order. Progress towards full convertibility was a decisive step in the full politicization of industrial relations. The way that different political parties and public bodies implement or deter the implementation of legislation is important but may not be the decisive issue. Recall that niekira-nai ' not decisive ' is a verbal predicate to which nareplacement could in principle be expected to apply. The location where the flux limit plays its decisive role is the high density jump behind the laser deposition region. To begin with, one can surmise that the volume of demand played a decisive role. In the third stage one side or the other mounted a decisive attack to break through the enemy's line and compel him to withdraw. Lacking words was irrelevant given a penchant for decisive action. Likewise, other factors may affect whether one can justifiably give exclusive propositions decisive assent. The fittest survive and prosper (by and large) - but anything at all may be the decisive factor. We have not seen decisive objections to the divine-fiat theory (which is consistent with some construals of anti-criterialism and inconsistent with others). In the study of human behaviour the perspective of the performers themselves cannot be decisive - at least not in all cases. When, in turn, structural explanations fail, it is situational variables that are decisive. Such an apparently decisive choice of collective identity obscures the undercurrents of ideological struggle in the region. Arguably, the former analysis better represents the sense, but 4.517 makes the comma after non-breakable decisive in favour of the latter analysis. Such an assumption over-simplifies, since to accept it would imply that diatonic, stable tonality inescapably expresses decisive, positive moods. Here, the laser intensity, pulse length, and target thickness are playing a decisive role. Among the particular filters, their social status becomes decisive. The evidence is not decisive, with either of these inter pretations of attention, but tends to support the limited capacity view. However, decisive progress can be made if we apply our l2 -adaptivity. The cause is the combination of power and the decisive will. Four of the five providers reported it to be a decisive factor, and one provider said it was the single decisive factor. In two of the 20 homes, the recruitment and retention of managerial staff was a decisive factor. Of these, ten said this was the decisive factor. The objective was not achieved, however, in part because the army lost the decisive advantage of surprise, numbers and technology. The spatial distribution within the emulsion detector strip was the decisive information required to assess signal versus background rates. Lawyers recognize that their own roles in the adjudicative decision-making process can be decisive. Merely the occurrence of overgeneration errors is not decisive on this point. The decisive factor is not the exact relationship but who is staying in the house. Beginning in the 1920s, 'decisive retirement measures ' were gradually put in place. The intensity with which this understanding is sought has a decisive impact on the outcome. As borne out by these examples, the metaphors are in fact means of acquiring knowledge, where similarity plays a decisive role. The impact of that war on existing political culture seems to have been the decisive factor. The difference was decisive for the outcome of the political crisis. Disposable incomes were still too small and the power of young people, particularly young girls, too weak to trigger a decisive confrontation between generations. Their specific contribution to the issue of minimum standards for workers' housing was decisive. Individual freedom of choice has become a decisive criterion for the quality of life. You are not powerful enough in relation to them to be sure of your preference's being decisive regardless of their wishes. Not only is it possible for preference to be just content-dependently decisive and so insufficient for freedom. Preserving the determinate relationship between games and strategy choices provides a decisive reason to take preferences to be all-things-considered ranking. Here the evidence is decisive that trade reduces pollution. I believe that this exerted a decisive influence on our language habits. Does this not mean that my preference is only context-dependently decisive? The decisive criterion was the number rather than the (vocalic) nature of the sonority peaks. I do not take this to be a decisive case for adopting such a reductive approach. Indeed, these reformers acted as decisive, though not exclusive, influences upon his theological outlook and ecclesiastical career. However, the conformal property is not believed to be a decisive factor in controlling the dynamics in the way that volume preservation itself is. Rarely did contemporaries regard outcomes in absolute terms of abject failure or decisive success. A balanced presentation of both sides of an argument is followed by a decisive opinion. The decisive transposition of values between religion and science took place within this context. The decisive step follows with a new "objectification" of technology. Three points are particularly decisive for the universality of this standpoint. The truncated brain marked a decisive disjunction between psychologists and physiologists who studied the emotions. The cortical differentiation of specific human faculties was decisive for various attempts to expand brain research to a comprehensive human science. The decisive role instead falls to the "effects of politics" (p. 9). At the same time, both sides continued to prepare for the decisive battle that was fast approaching. Theoretically, the change in any neurotransmitter component could play a decisive role in the micturition problems of older people. Indeed, the project involved a decisive change of working methods. Each fund has its own administrative, financial, and control structure, but government control is decisive, as the funds are headed by political appointees. The most important and decisive element of the urban structure was the new railway station connected by major roads to the previously existing station. The interviewed sick fund account manager did not provide much information about other decisive aspects that determined the decision context. Increasingly florid solo lines drive the work to a decisive conclusion. The most it entails is the idea that the consideration is decisive in some circumstances. The scale of operations is decisive for the profit potential, which largely depends on access to capital. The way it exercises the power of purse does not provide it with decisive leverage over the executive agencies. As noted above, the party position on the status of the state and on affirmative action as a principle is decisive. Second, the eval/apply model seems to have decisive advantages in terms of complexity. The turbo-mechanism and the competition for it could be one decisive clue. There are two aspects of this most decisive confrontation which are relevant in the present context. If reshuffling the genetic information would be decisive, both the clone and its genetic progenitor would be genetic parents of the child. In other words, the date of naturalisation became a decisive criterion for inclusion or exclusion. Their idea seems to be that the decisive criterion for distinguishing autonomous from interactive processes is feedback. Support for the internal market project among heads of state and government was the decisive factor. All interviewees answered and were decisive in all cases. What casuistry accomplishes in this manner is not ontologically decisive. A woman's reproductive function seems to have had some influence, but by no means a decisive one, on her economic activity. In liability suits, payment for services has provided decisive evidence of the relationship, reflecting agreement between the physician and patient. Second, they sought not just ' impartial ' judgements, but decisive judgements. The struggle was decisive precisely because of the propaganda which brought previously concealed class hostility into open political and public discourse. In other respects, however, there is a decisive break with convention. Not surprisingly, when viewed over the long-term, the decisive change in levels of urbanization is seen to occur at a later date. The decisive move from literature to painting came in 1952. Earlier in life disease may play a more decisive role as a risk factor. Thus, in industry, it is the sound use of physical capital in its high-tech form that is now decisive in calculating production costs. Consumption is of course accorded the decisive position in this line of reasoning. He rightly argues that some decisive political changes had little to do with the sectional conflict and yet helped push the nation towards crisis. As it happens the outcome, in my view, is a decisive victory for the individual organism. The integrative function was the decisive one here. If costs exceed benefits multiplied by the probability that their contribution will be decisive, they will remain inactive. Consequently, developments in the international financial structure have had a decisive influence on how wealth-creating activities are divided among nations. The role of migration in bringing about these rural changes was decisive. Manufacturing certainly declined and for some observers that was decisive. The picture which emerges does not single out any particular short period, such as the much-touted 1780s as a decisive phase. 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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