attributing / verb əˈtrɪb yut; noun ˈæ trəˌbyut /

归因于归属归咎于归功于

attributing2 个定义

v. 有主动词 verb

at·trib·ut·ed, at·trib·ut·ing.

  1. to regard as resulting from a specified cause; consider as caused by something indicated: She attributed his bad temper to ill health.
  2. to consider as a quality or characteristic of the person, thing, group, etc., indicated: He attributed intelligence to his colleagues.
  3. to consider as made by the one indicated, especially with strong evidence but in the absence of conclusive proof: to attribute a painting to an artist.
  4. to regard as produced by or originating in the time, period, place, etc., indicated; credit; assign: to attribute a work to a particular period; to attribute a discovery to a particular country.
n. 名词 noun
  1. something attributed as belonging to a person, thing, group, etc.; a quality, character, characteristic, or property: Sensitivity is one of his attributes.
  2. something used as a symbol of a particular person, office, or status: A scepter is one of the attributes of a king.
  3. Grammar. a word or phrase that is syntactically subordinate to another and serves to limit, identify, particularize, describe, or supplement the meaning of the form with which it is in construction. In the red house, red is an attribute of house.

attributing 近义词

v. 动词 verb

ascribe, assign to source

更多attributing例句

  1. Advertisers have known an entire generation of consumers as numbers and attributes.
  2. This sequence reveals how much of our behavior has a hefty biological predisposition, meaning we might be skewed towards developing a particular attribute or characteristic.
  3. We look at six to seven different sets of stock attributes and group them based on ease versus difficulty to trade in order to optimize execution.
  4. Google is now bringing some of these service attributes to Local Campaigns for the first time.
  5. In addition, paid links also included the nofollow link attribute.
  6. He is taking all the merit and attributing all the disasters to others.
  7. Attributing the last four years to either Republicans or Democrats is myopic American parochialism.
  8. We reported the Tennens' original accounts as facts without attributing them properly.
  9. But I know by now to be very careful about attributing too much significance to a report like that.
  10. Chaucer makes a mistake in attributing this harmony to all of the nine spheres.
  11. Therefore, they have no difficulty in attributing these evils to the severity of a just and good God.
  12. One critic, after attributing a remark of Chopin's to me, exclaims: "The author is fond of such violent jumps to conclusions."
  13. Movement therefore cannot be predicated of infinity, without also attributing stability to it.
  14. She well knew that something was wrong, and attributing it to Alice's crying, she awaited in silence for the storm to burst.