英:[fəˈnɒmɪnən]
美:[fəˈnɑːmɪnən]
英:[fəˈnɒmɪnən]
美:[fəˈnɑːmɪnən]
phe·nom·e·non
f na m nn [or] f na m nan
复数:phenomena或phenomenons
词根:phenomenal
adj.phenomenal 现象的;显著的;异常的;能知觉的
adv.phenomenally 现象上地;明白地;从感官认识到
n.phenomenology 现象学;现象论
noun
plural phenomena an observable fact or event
an object or aspect known through the senses rather than by thought or intuition
a temporal or spatiotemporal object of sensory experience as distinguished from a noumenon
a fact or event of scientific interest susceptible to scientific description and explanation
a rare or significant fact or event
plural phenomenons an exceptional, unusual, or abnormal person, thing, or occurrence
social phenomenon社会现象;群集现象
natural phenomenon自然现象
normal phenomenon正常现象
psychological phenomenon心理现象
plateau phenomenon高原现象
el nino phenomenon厄尔尼诺现象
rebound phenomenon回缩现象;回跳现象
这组词都有“奇迹”的意思,其区别是:
phenomenon指罕见的现象或奇人、奇事。
miracle一般指被认为是人力所办不到的奇异之事。
marvel侧重异乎寻常,奇怪,从而使人好奇。
wonder通常指使人惊奇的事迹、人物或景观,主要指人创造的奇迹。
以上来源于网络
1570年代,“直接观察到的事实,出现或被感知的事物,事件”,特别是在某些场合观察到的一种常规事实,源自于拉丁语 phænomenon,来自希腊语 phainomenon “出现或被看到的东西”,中性现在分词的名词用法 phainesthai “出现”, phainein “显露,使出现,展示”的被动语态(来自 PIE 词根 *bha-(1)“发光”)。记录了“非凡事件”的含义(1771年)。在哲学中,“经验的外观或直接对象”(1788年)。复数形式为 phenomena。
现象:任何体征或客观症状
任何可见的事件或事实
现象
Late Latin phaenomenon, from Greek phainomenon, from neuter of phainomenos, present participle of phainesthai to appear, middle voice of phainein to show — more at fancy
The first known use of phenomenon was in 1583
phishingnoun
a scam by which an Internet user is fooled into revealing personal information which can then be used illegally
phenylketonurianoun
an inherited disease of human beings that is marked by the inability to break down and process a certain chemical in the body and may cause severe brain damage if not treated properly
phenotypenoun
the visible characteristics of a plant or animal that result from the combined effects of the genes and the environment
phenotypenoun
the visible characteristics of a plant or animal that result from the combined effects of the genes and the environment
phenomenonnoun
plural phenomena an observable fact or event
a fact, feature, or event of scientific interest
a rare or important fact or event
plural phenomenons an exceptional, unusual, or abnormal person or thing
phenomenonnoun
an observable fact or event
an object or aspect known through the senses rather than by thought or intuition
a fact or event of scientific interest susceptible of scientific description and explanation
1 What I am paid to do is to observe him in a rigorous present tense, as a subject dynamically inhabiting a scene, as a phenomenon of study.
2 I think this is a phenomenon which calls for our great concern.
我认为这是一个值得我们高度关注的现象。
3 The movie eventually became a cultural phenomenon.
4 Galileo was exploring the phenomenon we call surface tension.
5 But cars and guns are a recent phenomenon.
6 When rain comes finally, washing away a low sky of muddy ocher, we who could not control the phenomenon are pressed into relief.
7 Not because I didn’t appreciate Virgil’s gesture, but because hugs were a rather strange and rare phenomenon in our house.
8 As he walked to the car, his head was often tilted back, alert to phenomena in the trees.
9 Although confused by this, she made note of it, labeling the phenomenon a “false change.”
10 For a few moments, she just played with this phenomenon: up—light on.
11 But it is a mark of maize’s social, cultural, and even political centrality that it was the first—and for centuries the only—phenomenon to pass from Mexico to the Andes.
12 This course presents the phenomena, theory, and modeling of turbulence the Earth's oceans and atmosphere.
本课程介绍地球海洋和大气层中扰流的现象 、 理论和模型.
13 This filtering phenomenon is very widespread and manifests itself in many ways.
14 Typical of Mud People to invent a complicated explanation for a simple phenomenon.
15 “The insect world is nature’s most astonishing phenomenon,” said the Dutch biologist C. J. Briejer.
16 An interval of space or time in which one set of events or phenomena is completed.
完成一组事件或现象所需要的一种空间或时间间隔.
17 But in the cases of the nova of 1572 and the comet of 1577 the data necessitated the phenomenon, and the phenomenon falsified the established theory.
18 The public came to imagine that physics held the key to all phenomena of the natural world, including the chemical and the biological.
19 But, no, his customer was merely experiencing what Johnson called the Solemn Moment—a phenomenon familiar to insurance salesmen.
20 This phenomenon, sometimes called wanderlust, may explain why people spend so much time and money on trips to interesting places.
这种现象, 有时叫做旅游癖, 可以用来解释为什么人们会把那么多时间和金钱花在有趣的旅游场所.
2 令人印象深刻的人
3 事件
comether thing show run event cause job page matter concern scene gear affair passage occurrence happening res goings-on occurring casus case deal circumstance incident occasion ongoing tiding affaire
4 珍奇
rare uncommon rarely uncommonly curiosity rarity rareness unique novel unaccustomed unfrequent novelty
5 杰出的人
7 奇迹
wonder miracle marvel prodigy phenom a joy to behold sign secret portent wonderment mirabilia wonderwork