英:[ˌsju:pə'venʃən]
美:[ˌsupə'venʃən]
英:[ˌsju:pə'venʃən]
美:[ˌsupə'venʃən]
词根:supervene
vi.supervene 随后发生;接着发生
vt.supervene 随后发生;取代
1640年代,源自于晚期拉丁语的 superventionem(主格 superventio),是 supervenire 的动名词形式,意为“除此之外的到来”(参见 supervene)。
附加,并发:除了早已存在的病状之外,又发生某种病
Latin supervenire, from super- + venire to come — more at come
The first known use of supervene was in 1636
supineadjective
lying on the back or with the face upward
showing mental or moral indifference : lazy
supineadjective
lying on the back or with the face upward
showing mental or moral indifference : lazy
superwomannoun
an exceptional womanespecially: a woman who succeeds in having a career and raising a family
supervisornoun
a person who supervisesespecially: an officer in charge of a unit or an operation of a business, government, or school
supervisornoun
a person who supervisesespecially: an officer in charge of a unit or an operation of a business, government, or school
supervisionnoun
the act of supervisingespecially: a critical watching and directing (as of activities)
superviseverb
superintend, oversee
superviseverb
superintend, oversee
superviseverb
superintend, oversee
superveneverb
to take place as an additional or unlooked-for development
1 “The existing order is complete,” Eliot explains, “before the new work arrives; for order to persist after the supervention of novelty, the whole existing order must be, if ever so slightly, altered.”
2 Experiments by Hertwig and Eckel seem to show that saliva loses its virulence on the supervention of cadaveric rigidity or putrefaction in the dead body.
3 Either the Objective is taken as primary, and then we have to account for the supervention of the Subjective which coalesces with it, which natural philosophy supposes.
4 Having occasion to use all possible precaution against the supervention of milk fever in my patient, I left particular directions that nothing stimulating should be administered, and assigned several good, substantial reasons.
5 It is true that Dr. A. is compelled to admit this among the causes of dropsy; but faithful to his theory, he supposed the supervention of an arterial reaction resulting in an effusion of serum.
6 It is the creation of a constitutional condition that requires the supervention of legislative power in the exercise of legislative discretion to give it effect.
7 The spontaneous supervention of trance relieves the spasm.
8 Or the Subjective is taken as primary, and then we have to account for the supervention of the objective, which spiritual philosophy supposes.
9 If these results should be confirmed by further experience, we would have attained additional means of preventing the supervention of whooping-cough in measles; a triumph of art and science which should elicit our warmest gratitude.
10 I say the feeling, not the touch; for the touch seems, as it were, a supervention to the feeling, a perfection given to it by the reaction of the higher powers.
11 The beneficent action of Apis, in intermittent fever, is still increased by the fact that it prevents the supervention of typhus, disorganizations of the spleen, dropsy, china-cachexia.
12 This, together with the supervention of hysterical fits, may aptly enough be compared to tarantism.
13 When one tube was filled with oxygen, and the other with nitrogen, on the supervention of the magnetic force, the oxygen was pulled towards the axis, the nitrogen being pushed out.
14 When a bubble of nitrogen was exposed in air in the magnetic field, on the supervention of the power, the bubble retreated from the magnet.
15 They had a quiet, happy life until the war supervened.
16 it was not the slow-spreading cancer that caused his death but a supervening heart attack