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2020-04-28 #11

Open soraliu opened 4 years ago

soraliu commented 4 years ago
  arbitrary
/ˈärbiˌtrerē/

任意的
(Rènyì de)

Definitions of arbitrary
[ English -> 简体中文 ]

adjective
    随意
        arbitrary
    独断
        arbitrary
    肆意
        arbitrary, willful, unauthorized, wilful, self-willed
    随便
        casual, random, arbitrary, informal, unceremonious, willful
    肆
        unauthorized, willful, arbitrary, wilful, self-willed

arbitrary
    任意的, 随意
soraliu commented 4 years ago

She is seeking a substitute for the very man whose departure made her cry.那个男人的离去令她伤心痛哭,她正想找一个人填补内心的空缺。

soraliu commented 4 years ago
  intensive
/inˈtensiv/

adjective
    concentrated on a single area or subject or into a short time; very thorough or vigorous.
        - "That, too, was subjected to intensive monitoring."
    Synonyms: thorough, thoroughgoing, in-depth, rigorous, exhaustive, all-inclusive, comprehensive, all-embracing, all-encompassing, complete, full, vigorous, strenuous, concentrated, condensed, accelerated, detailed, minute, close, meticulous, scrupulous, painstaking, methodical, careful

    (of an adjective, adverb, or particle) expressing intensity; giving force or emphasis.
        - "Fernando Pereira emailed an anecdote about intensive use of eh."

    denoting a property that is measured in terms of intensity (e.g., concentration) rather than of extent (e.g., volume), and so is not simply increased by addition of one thing to another.
        - "The first one is the vestibule of the channel, where the curvature of the dielectric boundary generates intensive electrostatic forces."

noun
    an intensive adjective, adverb, or particle; an intensifier.
        - "That is from the words of the intensives used when they talk about ‘very likely’, ‘you see it all the time’, et cetera."

Synonyms
    adjective
        - thorough, thoroughgoing, in-depth, rigorous, exhaustive, all-inclusive, comprehensive, all-embracing, all-encompassing, complete, full, vigorous, strenuous, concentrated, condensed, accelerated, detailed, minute, close, meticulous, scrupulous, painstaking, methodical, careful

    noun
        - intensifier

Examples
    - The United States was moving from an extensive economy to an intensive economy.

    - She said the public would be consulted next year and there would be a thorough, intensive review.

    - But the specialist training required to be the best at the job does not come easily, with each animal having to undertake a rigorous 13-week intensive course.

    - To preserve the variation named varieties have to be grafted, a labour intensive business which explains the high price.

    - She was subjected to an intensive combination of cytotoxic drugs and cranial radiotherapy.

    - The report says highly intensive agriculture using herbicide tolerant GM crops may be very damaging to biodiversity.

    - In Japan, intensive agriculture came in with migrants from the mainland about 2,300 years ago.

    - The truth is this is a labor intensive business and actually needs a good margin between the cost and the sale of the fabric in order to pay the overhead of being in business.

    - Computer forensics is a very labor intensive business in terms of accessing the abuser's computer and getting sufficient evidence of robustness that will stand up in court.

    - It just doesn't work out economically, because the restaurant business has low profit margins and is so labor intensive.

    - Cattle farming required a more intensive cultivation of fodder crops such as maize, potatoes, turnips, and mangels.

    - They took part in an intensive English class for eight weeks almost immediately on arrival.

    - The population, divided into a dozen chiefdoms and supported by intensive agriculture, soon rose to 15,000 or more.

    - Which would you prefer, a capital intensive business with few people or a people intensive one with little capital?

    - Opera is a hugely expensive business and very labour intensive.

    - In a highly automated service such as vending machine dispensing, the people element will be a less important element of the mix than a people intensive business such as a restaurant.

    - It is a labour intensive business, but Lisa says as they are getting more established and organized the workload seems to be lessening.

    - But perhaps the true price has been hidden, and the cost is perhaps even greater than some intensive agriculture, because the damage reaches far beyond the farms.

    - After several centuries of intensive cultivation agricultural productivity had probably started to fall, living standards for most were declining, and population growth had ceased.

    - The location of participation across the state, as expected, closely follows the areas of intensive commercial agricultural production.

    - Like intensive power production, so intensive agriculture spares the landscape.

    - A core of crime-busting constables will be singled out for intensive training and form a highly-skilled squad of at least 150 specialists.

    - The answer could be that in the Antarctica snowfields, they are subject to intensive UV irradiation which causes ionisation.

    - The basic case study entails the detailed and intensive analysis of a single case.

    - Many wheat breeders were successful in breeding semi-dwarf, high-yielding varieties that were well adapted to intensive agriculture.

    - Nor is a return to ‘primitive’ farming practices the only alternative to factory farming and highly intensive agriculture.

    - It helps if every learner exploits his interpersonal skills to the fullest through intensive courses.

    - Rigorous and data intensive, ecological economics builds on the idea that natural resources are as valid a form of capital as oil rigs.

    - A passenger whose baggage triggers an alarm might in turn be subject to intensivesearch procedures - and those are no laughing matter.

    - Fernando Pereira emailed an anecdote about intensive use of eh.
soraliu commented 4 years ago
  toes

verb
    push, touch, or kick (something) with one's toe.
        - "It's only a walk, but couples come down to the water, toeing shells through the sand, the surf through the sound underneath."

    walk with the toes pointed in (or out).
        - "he toes out when he walks"

noun
    any of the five digits at the end of the human foot.
        - "Though the toes of the human foot are generally not capable of independent or precise movement, the flexor muscles of the big toe are vital to our gait."

    the lower end, tip, or point of something, in particular.
        - "The following morning we climbed on, ascending steeply to reach the toe of the glacier that lead up to Syram and its unnamed pyramidal neighbour."

Synonyms
    verb
        - toenail

See also
    toe