decontextualised造句
例句與造句
- I'm using the expression to indicate that the words are meaninglessly decontextualised with no theoretical value.
- Research ethics in a medical context is dominated by principlism, an approach that has been criticised as being decontextualised.
- The latter has criticised the former for its caste origin theory, claiming that it has dehistoricised and decontextualised Indian society.
- It was a reaction to the abstract notion of language as a monolithic, decontextualised, static entity propagated by Chomsky, and it was conceived as a broad and interdisciplinary framework.
- Decontextualised knowledge does not give us the skills to apply our understandings to authentic tasks because, as Duffy and Jonassen ( 1992 ) indicated, we are not working with the concept in the complex environment and experiencing the complex interrelationships in that environment that determine how and when the concept is used.
- It's difficult to find decontextualised in a sentence. 用decontextualised造句挺難的
- In a highly critical article in the " Guardian " " The absurd world of Martin Amis " satirist Abu Hamza ( who was jailed for inciting racial hatred in 2006 ), suggesting that both men employ " mock erudition, vitriol and decontextualised quotes from the Qu'ran " to incite hatred.
- She told a Sydney symposium on'Australian Arts in an International Context'that she found the whole of Quai Branly to be a " regressive museology " and the presentation of Aboriginal art " in a vegetal environment " to be " an exotic " mise en sc鑞e " " in the worst taste . " It can't be decontextualised into a glorious otherness ".
- It should be noted that this argument has " no support whatsoever " from any mainstream historiography, and what little external commentary there has been has rejected it as, in the words of one critic " cherry-picked ", " decontextualised " and " tendentious " ( p . 414 )-a comment which would apply equally well to our article, and its interminable talk-page.
- Morris's response, " The absurd world of Martin Amis ", was also highly critical of Amis; although he did not accede to Bennett's accusation of racism, Morris likened Amis to the Muslim cleric Abu Hamza ( who was jailed for inciting racial hatred in 2006 ), suggesting that both men employ " mock erudition, vitriol and decontextualised quotes from the Qu'ran " to incite hatred.