词汇 | example_english_echo |
释义 | Examples of echoThese 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 detection of unexpected coherent echoes by incoherent scatter radars raises important questions concerning the generation mechanisms that spill over into coherent radars. First, however, there is the need for a systematic exploration of the mechanisms that can produce the instabilities behind the coherent echoes. The enthusiastic accumulation by fans of an unending suite of related images both echoes and subverts the mass mechanical reproduction of the modern celebrity image. Her description of exercises echoes that of the teacher's voice within the rehearsal room. A persistent pinkish noise sets in, along with throbbing echoes of the already echoed sounds, until the whole thing just cuts out at 1457. He had been sensitive to the echoing murmur of the mountains, that communicating of sounds destined to intoxicate sympathetic souls. The echoes themselves produce more echoes; the others spawn even more others. The indefinite placing of this period is echoed by the very ambiguity of the character himself. The echoes and messages of this united base did percolate to the lower levels. Furthermore, this echoes the findings in studies of cognitive aging discussed above, indicating that deficits of dynamic grouping can be part of several different disorders. Serial echoes were reviewed in 61 children both preand post-primary procedure (mean 17 months post-procedure, range 245). When people demand to have 'choices, not echoes', are they truly complaining about not having distinct choices or just about facing a bad outcome? In the conclusion to the section (bars 48-55), repeated echoes of a cadential gesture revisit and summarize the arguments heard earlier. Boumans introduces and illustrates two theses that are echoed at several other stages later in the volume. Measurement of tissue deformation, with applied force, by analysis of the returning ultrasound echoes, was described over 20 years ago [8,9]. Their views found echoes in the broader popular response to the affair. Testimony before the royal commission echoed this worry about the double threat to hierarchies of age and class. In this regard, there are echoes of the central problem addressed here concerning an excess of poorly defined terms that are ill-constrained in their usage. The contribution of conversational exchanges to the identification of linguistic units during acquisition has been echoed in different ways by other researchers since. We think of ourselves as moderns, but our "environmentalism" often echoes such despair. The problem of overlapping echoes is not addressed in this paper. As a poem about echoes, these echoes are sounded in the present, invoke the past, but also look into the future. When one transducer transmits, both transducers will receive the resulting echoes. Following the rules of choral responsion, the antistrophe matches the metrical pattern of the strophe, echoing its melody while also introducing a marked contrast thematically. In some ways this requirement echoes the need for friendlier environments for education and training emphasized earlier. The other timer function is the control of the maximum time of listening for the echoes. A recent ethnog raphy of hospice nursing echoes the theme. The orchestral part in bars 34-5 is confined to two harmonised echoes of the voice's db -eb ascent in bar 33. Spaces such as the transept clerestories, the baptistery, and the ambulatories were coupled to the nave and risked creating delayed echoes. The ' ' weeds,' ' echoing ' ' words,' ' represent a deathly counterpart to the laurels of the victors. We argue instead that the child most probably echoes the input. Significantly, it is also echoed in other contemporary aspects of culture, such as the contrast between invasive surgery or holistic medicine. Figure 2b demonstrates that in both cases, exception patterns suffer a greater impairment than regular patterns, echoing the surface dyslexia simulations. In turn, the cropped flue is echoed in the white shaft of space between the adjacent photos. I'll deal here just with quotational echoes, however. The scene at the gates of heaven has echoes of pass laws, police files, and the loss of individuality in the black community. The solo lamenter and echoing ingrates sung from the bocca d'inferno, exuding sound from the mouth that consumed them. Their rallying cries were urgent and so often repeated that echoes can still be heard today, but the anticipated revolution and revelation never arrived. The echoing power of chains of association in our mind is lessened by the naming of a dominant identity. He notices that reverberant environments, the presence of strong echoes, and the bending of sounds around obstacles cause a decrease in the precision of localisation. Voids, cavities, and other dielectric interfaces represent discontinuities that can give rise to pulse echoes. Each of the returning echoes is displayed as grey scale dots and varying shades of grey represents the amplitude. Even when she was crowned separately from her husband, the arrangement of ceremonies closely echoed those of the four days of a king's coronation. Such cysts may or may not contain small dense mobile echoes, snow like inclusions (these are floating broodcapsules which are often called hydatid sand). They are attached to history through the images and echoes recorded by pilgrims throughout the centuries, caref ully documented here. The texts of these communions are not invariably echoes of the assigned pericopes. Finally, it was echoed in the concept of the cycle of life, with no clearly defined childhood or old age and certainly no middle-age. There is also a sense that beneath the apparent development consensus, there are echoes of much longer standing developing country demands. The point is echoed in more recent anti-utilitarian writing. The hospital-based statin expenditure pattern is echoed in primary care but to a considerably greater degree. In this you may hear echoes of both proposal 1 and proposal 2 above. The spoken lines are echoed in the backing tracks, very occasionally with a sung rendition of the same text. Take the recurring theme of ' echoes', surely a trope with passive overtones. The throbbing stream echoes the pulsing rhythms of the "tumultuous seas," and an ordered metrical structure governs what had at first appeared fitful rhythmic motions. From a first series of measurements taken all around the robot, ultrasonic echoes are obtained; they are the existing object marks. The latter includes 'pickyour-own' (u-pick) sales, farm markets and roadside stands; this distinction is echoed by other studies37,38. The image is reinforced in other passages, just as it is echoed in narrative descriptions throughout the novella. Woven into the structure of the music, these echoes form a collage of connotations from which meaning can be inferred. Chapter 5 details the findings from mapping both the day and inpatient units, with echoes of the themes expressed in the individual interviews. The other is that he deliberately chose it as echoing or paraphrasing his architecture. Again, this exchange of ideas was to be echoed in the education debate. Twain's rewriting of such attitudes is rather more complex but, nevertheless, it does contain both refutations and echoes of the above. The presence of large planes of architectural concrete risked creating delayed echoes across the nave. The patriotic and unifying force of this image still echoes at the end of the 20th century. Many agronomists, faithfully echoed by agricultural historians, reckon that sharecropping hampers technical progress. His caveats were echoed or ampli®ed by a small number of critics. No echoes are registered from the hidden rear face of the mountains, nor from more remote surfaces occluded by the nearer mountains. The radio frequency data of returning ultrasound echoes contain much more data than appears in an ultrasound image. His comments echoed those of other male participants, who all anticipated a change in their routine of physical activity. My enduring impression of the text echoes whoever it was that said that the defining characteristic of geology is the inherent incompleteness of its datasets. However, the soundings were not going well - at many of the sites they had failed to detect bottom echoes. Balinese death thrashers echoed a broader regionalist discourse by fetishising their marginality in opposition to reggae's overwhelming popularity. We have echoed the growing consensus in psychology by advocating the use of a broad-scale model. On the other hand, slow propagation of sound causes noticeable delays that are perceived as echoes and reverberation. The need for pre-literacy skills is stressed, echoing comments in other chapters regarding visual literacy. Even echoes involve a delayed version of the source. The same confidence was again echoed by other theorists of de facto rule. The presence of a postmenstrual time-dependent peak and its echoes must also be considered in establishing the logical analysis of alternative hypotheses. The 1992 ideology variance model echoes these conclusions. Indeed, the conflicting viewpoints echoed the dilemmas faced by the colonial powers. In more than one way, the step from functions to computations echoes the step to relations. The precise specification of hypotheses and the explicit confrontation with empirical material echoes the doctoral thesis out of which the book grew. If public debate fizzled by about 1905, there were strong echoes of it long afterwards, both in theology and in the humanities more generally. The writer's inclusive attitude toward women is echoed throughout the journals and newspapers of the period under review. He was echoing the conviction of many contemporary philosophers and grammarians that no form of writing could adequately replace speech. Simple harmony occurs when an event is supported, strengthened or echoed by others. Even curse tablets are limited to the human reactions to theft and perjury and the instant demand for painful retribution, echoed throughout the primitive world. The misunderstanding of grammatical competition is echoed in other passages in the book. Their songs are conceived and sung in a natural landscape; moreover, this natural landscape participates by echoing back their music. Aspects of their style of writing may become part of and be echoed in the tributes. All of this is echoed externally by the position and dimension of the openings, which are freer than those possible in traditional solid wall construction. Other societies endorsed these ideas and echoed similar rhetoric. What did happen was the circulation of rumours regarding a possible second uprising echoing 1857. A stylised flower (echoing the bedflower)is immediately recognisable by its shape and colour: it has a thick green stalk and a full pinkish bloom. The graph mostly echos this, but has some anomalous behaviour for small arrays. Finding support from others was echoed when the men were sharing their experiences about side effects. 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. |
反思网英语在线翻译词典收录了377474条英语词汇在线翻译词条,基本涵盖了全部常用英语词汇的中英文双语翻译及用法,是英语学习的有利工具。