英:['meʒərəblɪ]
美:['meʒərəblɪ]
英:['meʒərəblɪ]
美:['meʒərəblɪ]
adjective
capable of being measured : able to be described in specific terms (as of size, amount, duration, or mass) usually expressed as a quantityspecifically: large or small enough to be measured Nutmeg has a bitter taste, so cats are unlikely to consume any measurable amount. —Elaine Wexler-Mitchell A Becquerel is the smallest measurable unit of radioactivity. —Neco Cockburn Its scope was no longer a measurable form. It was beyond wealth, beyond power. —Ernie Colon and A. J. Gamble
Science is the study of facts—things that are measurable, testable, repeatable, verifiable.—David Gerrold
great enough to be noticeable or worth considering : significant "… He possesses no measurable talent, his arrogance rivals even that of his father, and he seems to relish in his fame …"—Steve Kloves
Another terrible opinion poll confirming all the other terrible polls seemed to add no measurable sense of panic to the Labor mood.—Geoff Kitney
noun
something that may be measuredespecially: a measurable physical attribute (such as height or weight) or ability (such as speed or jumping height) of an athlete —often used in plural His measurables were almost off the charts at the NBA draft combine in Chicago: 7-foot-1, with a 36½-inch running vertical jump, the highest for a 7-footer in combine history. —Jeff McDonald
The measurables are pouring in from the NFL scouting combine, where the inspection of the young and the strong goes way beyond the old turn-your-head-and-cough physical. —Steve Hummer
Adjective Middle English mesurable "that can be measured, middling, discreet, moderate," borrowed from Anglo-French, "that can be measured, finite, moderate, restrained," borrowed from Late Latin mensūrābilis "that can be measured" (Medieval Latin, "moderate, reasonable"), from mensūrāre "to measure >entry 2" + Latin -bilis "capable (of acting), worthy (of being acted upon)" — more at -able
The first known use of measurable was in 1565
meatnoun
something eaten for nourishmentespecially: solid food as distinguished from drink
the edible part of something as distinguished from the covering (as a shell or husk)
walnut meat
animal and especially mammal flesh used as food
measure1 of 2noun
an adequate, fixed, or suitable limit or amount
surprised beyond measure
amount entry 2, extent, degree
gained a large measure of freedom
the size, capacity, or quantity of something as fixed by measuring
use equal measures of ingredients
something (as a yardstick or cup) used in measuring
a unit used in measuring
the foot is a measure of length
a system of measuring
metric measure
the act or process of measuring
dance entry 2 sense 2especially: a slow and stately dance
rhythm or movement in music or poetry : meter, cadence
the part of a musical staff between two bars or the group of beats between these bars
an action planned or taken to achieve a desired resultespecially: a legislative bill or act
measure2 of 2verb
to mark or fix in multiples of a specific unit
measure out two cups
to find out the size, extent, or amount of
measure the piece of paper
estimate entry 1 sense 1
measured the distance with my eye
to bring into comparison
measure your skill against an opponent's
to serve as a measure of
a thermometer measures temperature
to have as its measurement
the room measures 12 by 12 feet
measure1 of 2noun
an adequate, fixed, or suitable limit or amount
surprised beyond measure
amount entry 2, extent, degree
gained a large measure of freedom
the size, capacity, or quantity of something as fixed by measuring
use equal measures of ingredients
something (as a yardstick or cup) used in measuring
a unit used in measuring
the foot is a measure of length
a system of measuring
metric measure
the act or process of measuring
dance entry 2 sense 2especially: a slow and stately dance
rhythm or movement in music or poetry : meter, cadence
the part of a musical staff between two bars or the group of beats between these bars
an action planned or taken to achieve a desired resultespecially: a legislative bill or act
measure2 of 2verb
to mark or fix in multiples of a specific unit
measure out two cups
to find out the size, extent, or amount of
measure the piece of paper
estimate entry 1 sense 1
measured the distance with my eye
to bring into comparison
measure your skill against an opponent's
to serve as a measure of
a thermometer measures temperature
to have as its measurement
the room measures 12 by 12 feet
measurementnoun
the act or process of measuring
a figure, extent, or amount obtained by measuring
a system of measures
measurementnoun
the act or process of measuring
a figure, extent, or amount obtained by measuring
a system of measures
measurelessadjective
being without or beyond measure : immeasurable
the measureless universe
measuredadjective
regulated or determined by a standard
marked by rhythm : even
walk with measured steps
deliberate entry 2 sense 1, calculated
speak with measured rudeness
measurableadjective
capable of being measured
1 Measurably, global structure of self - esteem and special structures of self - efficacy are emphasized.
从测量上看, 自尊 注重测量整体结构, 自我 效能强调测量领域关联的特殊结构.
2 That idea has been measurably disproved in urban and rural America for decades.
3 "Two-thirds of those who responded after one infusion went on to achieve remission, while those who hadn't responded measurably after two infusions were unlikely to start to respond after an additional one."
4 Do you think things are measurably worse here, or in the world generally, right now, as opposed to 20 years ago, or 100 years ago?
5 Is there an area of your life you'd like to measurably improve — such as your finances or relationships — but something seems to be holding you back?
你的生活,除了似乎阻碍你的事情外,还有想显著改善的地方吗?比如你的财务或是人际关系。
6 Does he think life would measurably improve in his native India if America drew down its military presence in South and East Asia, allowing China to dominate the region unimpeded?
7 In many ways, in fact, they are measurably better.
其实,从许多方面来看,现在(的局势)比25年前要好得多。
8 While his administration is spending huge sums of money to try and bolster American manufacturing across the country, those investments have yet to measurably show up in political support.
9 Now special education services are required to elicit measurably decent outcomes to meet the federal standard for a Free Appropriate Public Education.
10 We are hard-wired to form deep bonds with another person — bonds that can measurably enhance our lives.
11 Over the course of time, it does appear these things that we've changed measurably, radically in the last 60, 70 years are having an effect on our health.
12 The United Nations projected that as many as half of the teenagers in southern Africa would succumb to the disease, which was already “measurably eroding economic development, educational attainment, and child survival” across sub-Saharan Africa.
13 The rules are designed to ensure developers leave the natural environment in a measurably better state than it was beforehand.
14 And, less measurably, it is a source of economic optimism: a boost to consumer and business sentiment.
而且还有一点不常被人注意到,那就是她还是经济乐观主义的来源——她给消费者和企业都增加了信心。
15 Putting on top ever-increasing amounts of data that needs to be processed and exchanged between systems adds measurably to the demand for more computing power and speed.
随着需要在系统之间处理和交换的数据不断增长,将需要更多的计算能力和更快的计算速度。
16 This machine is suitable to measurably fill the ointment materials with high viscosity and poor flowability.
适合粘稠度较大,流动性较差的膏体物料的计量灌装.
17 One measurable biomarker that could indicate dementia is a change in cerebrospinal fluid, a substance present in the brain.5Stage 2: Very Mild Cognitive DeclineIn the second stage of dementia, the person may begin to notice mild memory loss.
18 By the end of a change wave execution period your organization's productivity will have measurably increased based on the entrance and exit criteria of the change wave package.
在变更波执行阶段的末尾,您的组织的生产力将根据变更波包的进入和退出标准显著地增加。
19 Even if you're really struggling with something you've done, some terrible regret, or some trait you don't like in yourself, it's hard to stay at bottom while someone is measurably better for your existence.
20 The treatise, authored by Richard J. Herrnstein and Charles Murray, argued that human intelligence is heritable and that various ethnic groups have measurably different levels of intelligence.
2 适度地
3 显著
great outstanding substantial prominent pronounced measurable noteworthy conspicuous observable salient significantly widely conspicuously tangibly noteworthiness
4 适度
moderate modest measurable measured graceful reasonably mildly measure compass moderation modesty sobriety within measure
5 可测
7 清楚
clear express plain distinct legible categorical clear-cut unambiguous perspicuous clearly fairly expressly markedly clearness come into focus in no uncertain terms
8 多少
how somewhat some something after a manner in a measure how much in a way some extent in one way a thing or two in some measure any ratherish summat gather in what in a kind of way so much somewhat of
9 到某种程度