英:['pri:dɪˌtɜ:mɪ'neɪʃən]
美:[ˌpridɪˌtɜmə'neɪʃən]
英:['pri:dɪˌtɜ:mɪ'neɪʃən]
美:[ˌpridɪˌtɜmə'neɪʃən]
"he entered the argument with a predetermination to prove me wrong"
"先前被确定的状态; 预先决定的行为",1630年代; 参见 predetermine 和名词后缀 -ation。
预决定
The first known use of predetermination was in 1647
1 What effect this predetermination of character has had upon his artistic development shall be discussed in another place.
2 I would say a more common thread that doesn't often get mentioned to each of my novels is an element of predetermination, an element of fate.
3 "He had no foregone conclusions, no arbitrary predeterminations, no obstinacy, and no egoism."
4 It heard with predetermination, and decided without evidence.
5 Upon the instant of his recovery, he sprang toward Warburton, silently and with predetermination: he must regain some fragment of those plans.
6 As for his Alzheimer’s risk, Hemsworth emphasized that while his DNA gives a “strong indication” of what could happen, it’s not a predetermination.
7 We knew very well that among a certain clique of the Frogpondians, there existed a predetermination to abuse us under any circumstances.
8 Hear me, then, I beg of you, with no predetermination to disregard me, but with an equitable resolution to attend to reason, and a candour that leaves an opening to conviction.
9 Those are the kinds of people who are the most dangerous to send into space, the people who think predetermination means they don’t ever have to make a choice again.
10 Circumstances should affect a predetermination on this point, yet where they are balanced, she is the wiser, who postpones a matrimonial connection, until her age, and her preparation for it, indicate its propriety.
11 God's absolute decree and predetermination of all events, good or evil.
12 At the same time, he believes this life is a combination of predetermination and controlling one’s own destiny.
13 This not consciously; in fact, I have a secret doctrine to the effect that in literature no imaginative effects are achieved by logical predetermination.
14 We may illustrate the principles of this predetermination by a simple example.
15 Lady Audley said this with the predetermination of dressing at four, and thus dispensing with the services of her attendant.
16 Liberty does not perish therein; but from its predeterminations it may be said that it was inevitable that it should so decide.
17 The man who pays is the real enthusiast; he comes with a predetermination to be amused, and his spirit is exalted accordingly.
18 It is a pluralistic world just because the will of man is free, and predetermination is excluded.
19 It’s not as if Anthony makes a predetermination to take 35 shots and dominate the ball.
20 If the former decides, and the latter does not perform, it is a state of imbecility; and if the latter acts without the predetermination of the former, it is a state of lunacy.