defining something造句
例句與造句
- "The moment you define something as a supercomputer, United States law has a variety of regimes, " said Gage.
- "If you define something narrowly enough, everyone can be the biggest, " said one veteran Manhattan real estate executive.
- Dr . Greene said the most interesting aspect was " how hard it was to define something that seems so obvious ."
- It's how the reals are defined, if you don't like it, define something else and work with that.
- The undulant bands of blue and yellow look as if they define something topographic or atmospheric : a galaxy perhaps, or an ocean floor.
- It's difficult to find defining something in a sentence. 用defining something造句挺難的
- "Funky " once meant " foul smelling, " and now it also defines something that is " extraordinary ."
- That can be particularly vexing for bigger companies with many different divisions, each with an entrenched view on how to define something as fundamental as revenue.
- And when you actually start to define something is when you realise how dumb it is to use meaningless words when you are actually asking something specific.
- Asked what defined something as newsworthy, Hyman said, " In that it hasn't been out in the marketplace, and the news marketplace ."
- You cannot define something as an " attack " page simply because the page describes criminal or tortious acts that are ruled on by a court of law.
- However, I do think that we're going down a slippery slope here where we, in wikipedia, are defining something that may not yet exist.
- Because it would be defining something brand-new, the underscore idea would be marginally more confusing . talk ) 16 : 04, 12 April 2010 ( UTC)
- Many projects have failed because the focus was on having people with SAP knowledge, but with no business skills and so defining something that works . . . wrongly.
- "The moment you define something as a supercomputer, United States law has a variety of regimes, " said John Gage, Sun Microsystems'science director.
- And you're trying to define something that transcends language, but you're using language to define it _ and then you end up sounding like Shirley MacLaine.