classical compounds造句
例句與造句
- Pay careful heed to the bolded terms, with their Greek letters and classical compounds.
- While Gerber and Shiu applied this function to the classical compound-Poisson model, Powers argued that an insurer s surplus is better modeled by a family of diffusion processes.
- The term " Lusophone " is a classical compound, whereby the combining form " Luso-" derives from the Latin term for an area roughly corresponding to modern Portugal, called Lusitania.
- In Europe this usually meant borrowings from Latin and coinages were particularly highlighted ( see classical compounds especially ), though this has sometimes been decried as pretentious, these coinages being criticized as inkhorn terms.
- An "'azotosome "'( classical compound of " azote ", French for nitrogen, and " Titan, and it is capable of functioning in these conditions as a membrane.
- It's difficult to find classical compounds in a sentence. 用classical compounds造句挺難的
- Quite a few Russian words are borrowed from other languages in an already compounded form, including numerous " classical compounds " or internationalisms : 02B > < > 18; L'automobile '.
- Classical compounds are sometimes used to lend grandeur or the impression of scientific rigour to humble pursuits : the study of " cosmetology " will not help anyone become an " astronaut ".
- The word " automobile " is a classical compound derived from the Ancient Greek word " aut髎 " ( ?P??? ), meaning " self ", and the Automobile Club of Great Britain in 1897.
- This hypothetical cell membrane was termed an " azotosome ", a classical compound made of " azote ", French for nitrogen, and " soma ", Greek for body, by analogy with " liposome ".
- The theoretical foundation of ruin theory, known as the Cram閞 Lundberg model ( or classical compound-Poisson risk model, classical risk process or Poisson risk process ) was introduced in 1903 by the Swedish actuary Filip Lundberg.
- Classical compounds frequently vary their stressed syllable when borrowed, it typically becomes the foundation of a whole series of related words : e . g . " astrology, astrological, astrologer / astrologist / astrologian, astrologism ".
- :: : : : Medeis-- the first stem of a classical compound is almost never inflected ( with the exception of a few anomalous pronominal forms ) . . . talk ) 01 : 17, 8 November 2014 ( UTC)
- Words taken directly from Latin and Ancient Greek are generally perceived as colder, more technical, and more medical or scientific compare " life " ( Anglo-Saxon ) with " biology " ( classical compound a modern coinage created from Greek roots ).
- As a result, Japanese, Chinese, Korean, and Vietnamese share a large common corpus of vocabulary in the same way a large number of Greek-and Latin-derived words both inherited or borrowed into European languages, or modern coinages from Greek or Latin roots are shared among modern European languages see classical compound.
- As with other classical compounds, adding the suffix to an initial word-stem derived from Greek or Latin may be used to lend grandeur or the impression of scientific rigor to humble pursuits, as in " cosmetology " ( " the study of beauty treatment " ) or " cynology " ( " the study of dog training " ).
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