英:[ˌtɜ:mɪnə'lɒdʒɪkl]
美:[ˌtɜmɪnə'lɒdʒɪkl]
英:[ˌtɜ:mɪnə'lɒdʒɪkl]
美:[ˌtɜmɪnə'lɒdʒɪkl]
词根:terminology
n.terminology 术语,术语学;用辞
Adjective
1. of or concerning terminology;
"terminological disputes"
Medieval Latin terminus term, expression (from Latin, limit) + English -o- + -logy
The first known use of terminology was in 1770
ternnoun
any of numerous sea birds that often have a forked tail, black cap, and white or gray body and that in comparison to the related gulls have a smaller and slenderer body and bill and narrower wings
term1 of 2noun
end entry 1 sense 1b
a fixed period of timeespecially: the time for which something lasts : duration the new school term
served two terms
plural conditions that limit the nature and scope of something (as an agreement)
could not accept their terms
a word or expression that has an exact meaning in some uses or is limited to a particular field
legal terms
plural words of a particular kind
spoke in glowing terms
a mathematical expression (as 3x in x2 + 3x − y) connected to another by a plus or a minus sign
an element (as a numerator) of a fraction or proportion
personal relationship
on good terms with the neighbors
agreement sense 1b
come to terms after much compromise
a state of acceptance or understanding
came to terms with the decision
term2 of 2verb
to apply a term to : call, name
termitenoun
any of a group of pale-colored soft-bodied social insects that feed on wood, live in colonies consisting of winged sexual forms, wingless sterile workers, and often soldiers, and that include some very destructive to wooden structures and trees called alsowhite ant
termitenoun
any of a group of pale-colored soft-bodied social insects that feed on wood, live in colonies consisting of winged sexual forms, wingless sterile workers, and often soldiers, and that include some very destructive to wooden structures and trees called alsowhite ant
terminusnoun
final goal : finishing point
a post or stone marking a boundary
either end of a transportation line or travel route
the station or town at such a place
terminologynoun
the special terms or expressions used in a field
the terminology of law
terminologynoun
the special terms or expressions used in a field
the terminology of law
1 This terminological conflict has deep historic and cultural roots.
2 Names can be divided into common names, proper names, and terminological names.
名词可以分成普通名词、专有名词、和术语名词。
3 Normally open and candid persons are found concealing the paper against a later and freer hour; terminological inexactitude is even resorted to in order to cover such jackdaw-hoardings; glances become covetous and suspicious.
4 The edge of the inquiry is blunted, if I may so say, by the vagueness of terminological distinctions, and we must rely upon general impressions.
5 The team that wrote the TMX specifications noticed that the TMX standard is not enough for managing terminological data and created the TBX standard.
编写TMX规范的团队指出,TMX标准对于管理术语表数据还不够,因此创建了TBX 标准。
6 Now, being a busy man, he gave little heed to the terminological convolutions of names among the British aristocracy.
7 Studies of topic have long been in difficulty due to terminological profusion and confusion, and underlying conceptual vagueness as well.
对主题问题的研究长期以来因概念界定不清且术语不统一而困难重重。
8 I consider that his solution of the difficulty was an ample reward to me—and to you, if you too have any taste in terminological exactitude—for my fracture of a social convention.
9 Her 7-year-old daughter, who knows the proper terminology for female genitalia, had no problem complaining of vaginal irritation.
10 Its popular designation preserves its early ecclesiastical associations, though with some degree of "terminological inexactitude."
11 TMX includes the elements and, which can be used for adding terminological information to a document.
TMX包含的和元素可用于向文档中添加术语信息。
12 Thus, in 1970, when Mr. Nader began asking for civic-minded "whistleblowers" in corporations and government to step forward and report fraud and other misdeeds, he knew that he was performing a terminological salvage job.
13 It seems appropriate to discuss some terminological aspects before proceeding.
它似乎适宜于在进行之前讨论一些术语方面的东西。
14 Eurodicautom, a multilingual terminological database maintained by the Translation Service of the European Commission, was initially developed to assist in-house translators.
15 Is that a cut, or a saving, or a terminological minefield?
16 That we create terminological boxes for our own convenience which change the way we perceive people outside our heads as well.
17 A committee was appointed to recommend terminological standardization.
一个委员会被指定来推广术语标准化。
18 Leaving this somewhat lengthy terminological discussion, we now come to the description of the phenomenon itself.
19 The socage tenure has had a very curious terminological history.
20 Amazon reviewers, in particular, lean on this terminology, but only for stuff that has truly earned the title.