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2020-05-12 #18

Open soraliu opened 4 years ago

soraliu commented 4 years ago
  muscle
/ˈməsəl/

noun
    a band or bundle of fibrous tissue in a human or animal body that has the ability to contract, producing movement in or maintaining the position of parts of the body.
        - "The processes that bring about movement of the voluntary muscles of the body start on the surface of the brain in an area called the motor cortex."

    physical power; strength.
        - "A matter of a difference in opinion should not be settled with muscle rather than the brain."
    Synonyms: strength, power, muscularity, brawn, burliness, beef, beefiness, thew

verb
    move (an object) in a particular direction by using one's physical strength.
        - "He muscles the log toward the opposite bank, crouches atop a slick boulder, and steadies the log."

Synonyms
    noun
        - strength, power, muscularity, brawn, burliness, beef, beefiness, thew
        - influence, power, strength, might, force, forcefulness, weight, clout
        - muscleman
        - muscularity, heftiness, sinew, brawniness, brawn

Examples
    - These groups are easy targets because they don't have the political muscle or the money.

    - Asha thought of him as a dumb jockey with no brains but plenty of muscle.

    - If the Sopranos ever need some muscle they should drop by the Flamingo.

    - This is a clear case of a multinational conglomerate using its political muscle to the disadvantage of everyone but itself.

    - The six-liter, 325-horsepower turbo diesel engine can muscle you up loose inclines and keep you in the passing lane.

    - It is a clever strategy, which has the double benefit of emphasising the Chancellor's political muscle while displaying the weakness of his rival.

    - In this condition, muscle and fibrous tissues of the renal artery wall thicken and harden into rings.

    - Louis was the sort of low-grade man child that shoestring celebrities often employ as muscle to keep up appearances and work as a butler.

    - The former uses hired thugs to enforce repayment from the debtors; the latter employs the Feds as paid muscle.

    - He was at least twice my size, all muscle and brute strength.

    - Australia has given more than one million dollars to help the process along and it could still be asked to supply judicial muscle to the international tribunal.

    - But it is an election year and these groups are ready to flex the political muscle.

    - Nesterenko is tall and strong, though, and started mobilising that muscle
bd0
 at just the right time.

    - With European animation companies supplying the creative juice and the US bringing their marketing muscle to bear, these could be profitable for all concerned.

    - The silver of the cuffs that bind his hands together behind his back glint as they muscle him down in the direction of the street below, where many sprawling police cars have gathered.

    - A septum of connective tissue separates the circular muscle layers of the pylorus and duodenum.

    - the calf muscle

    - But he needed some financial muscle, a little fiscal clout to open a few doors for him.

    - These offer the prospect of being able to mobilise grassroots lobbying muscle to influence policy makers.

    - Countries needed to put political muscle behind health improvement measures, he added.

    - At power forward, Portland can go with Wallace or Brian Grant, depending on whether you want star power or muscle and hustle.

    - an ex-marine of enormous proportions who'd been brought along as muscle

    - Predictably, the alien blesses the boy with his powers, so the audience is not robbed of the opportunity to see some muscle, brawn and macho acts from the young star in the second half.

    - The truth is, governments and governments alone have the financial and political muscle that can deliver real change.

    - His Parliamentary opponents delightedly congratulated each other on their unprecedented exhibition of constitutional muscle.

    - I really hope he cuts a deal and brings in the hired muscle.

    - he had enough muscle and resources to hold his position on the council

    - he had muscle but no brains

    - Once extracted, they can be stimulated in a laboratory to develop into any type of body cell or organ including bone, muscle and body tissue.

    - But without our brain and muscle not a single wheel can turn.
soraliu commented 4 years ago
soraliu commented 4 years ago
soraliu commented 4 years ago
  troubleshoot
/ˈtrəbəlˌSHo͞ot/

verb
    solve serious problems for a company or other organization.
        - "What I need more practice on is troubleshooting ."

Examples
    - ‘There's a limit to the resolution that you're going to get when you troubleshoot with a system like ours,’ he admitted.

    - The aircraft commander, navigator, and flight engineer began to troubleshoot the system.

    - Check to see if the speakers work properly before trying to troubleshoot your system.

    - They know how to use a specific set of tools, and can troubleshoot computer systems that other, more capable people have designed for them.

    - Fault trees are commonly used to troubleshoot complex systems such as devices used in airplanes and nuclear power plants.

    - In this case, what they're going to do is use their knowledge of the systems and talk with mechanics and try and troubleshoot it from the air.

    - I spent over $10,000 in staff time troubleshooting the system and providing technical support.

    - Both are useful for troubleshooting problems with the operating system.

    - It is included in these operating systems as a diagnostics tool for the system administrator, to help him in troubleshooting.

    - The troubleshootersin this world of network instability are in high demand, and earn $5,000 or more a day.

    - He also has a proven track record in troubleshooting, having rescued failing Swindon Council a year ago.

    - Any that slip into the lowest category of ‘poor’ when the Comprehensive Performance Assessment tables are updated next year could see government troubleshooters sent in.

    - What I need more practice on is troubleshooting.

    - The book takes a very systematic approach to both installation and troubleshooting electric motor drives.

    - If a high school student shows up for class only three days a week, every week, and then gets a poor grade at the end of the year, the course material seems a poor starting point for troubleshooting.

    - A very good measure to consider is permitting system troubleshooting to be done via dial-up modem.

    - The hardware explanations, advice on purchasing new systems, suggestions, tips, and troubleshooting make this b
9fa
ook worthwhile purchase.

    - The manual includes the code translations, but this is a nice feature that will assist veterans and newbies alike when troubleshooting their system.

    - A high-powered trio of troubleshooters is understood to have completed its under-wraps report on attempts to restore harmony at the deeply divided cathedral.

    - The service plan also provides remote system troubleshooting and preventative maintenance to uncover potential problems before they occur.

    - A team of troubleshooters has been called into a York estate where nuisance youths have forced the community centre to shut up shop at night.

    - But the notion of employing a civilian brigade of unarmed troubleshooterswill hold little water with those who have experienced at first hand such ‘21st century crime’.

    - There are diagnostics and a system log to aid with troubleshooting and even the ability to flash the unit with new firmware to support new features or any bugfixes in the future.

    - The marker system simplifies troubleshooting by allowing nine markers to be displayed on the screen at any one time.

    - Understanding how things work makes troubleshooting easier and defines a true system or network administrator.

    - Tools must now provide comprehensive analysis that prequalifies, troubleshoots and pinpoints faults.

    - You must do troubleshooting and reconcile within yourself what you want to do.

    - End users also must conduct performance testing and product compliance with the added complications of field service troubleshooting and fault isolation.

    - While troubleshooting the problem, the crew was unable to correct the split condition in the right main gear.
soraliu commented 4 years ago
  efficient
/iˈfiSHənt/

有效率的
(Yǒu xiàolǜ de)

Definitions of efficient
[ English -> 简体中文 ]

adjective
    效能
        efficient
    爽利
        efficient, smart, prompt, quick

efficient
    有效率的, 高效
soraliu commented 4 years ago
  effective
/iˈfektiv/

有效
(Yǒuxiào)

Definitions of effective
[ English -> 简体中文 ]

adjective
    有效
        effective, valid
    灵
        clever, effective, efficacious, sharp, quick, alert
    有力的
        potent, predominant, effective, predominate

effective
    有效, 有效的
soraliu commented 4 years ago
  efficient
/iˈfiSHənt/

有效率的
(Yǒu xiàolǜ de)

Definitions of efficient
[ English -> 简体中文 ]

adjective
    效能
        efficient
    爽利
        efficient, smart, prompt, quick

efficient
    有效率的, 高效