bring to reason / ˈri zən /

说理劝解劝说劝解一下

bring to reason3 个定义

n. 名词 noun
  1. a basis or cause, as for some belief, action, fact, event, etc.:the reasons for declaring war.
  2. a statement presented in justification or explanation of a belief or action: I dare you to give me one good reason for quitting school!
  3. sufficient cause, as produced by a situation that makes an act, feeling, etc., obviously proper or appropriate: After the mess he made of our yard, we have good reason to look for another landscaper.
v. 无主动词 verb
  1. to think or argue in a logical manner.
  2. to form conclusions, judgments, or inferences from facts or premises.
  3. to urge reasons which should determine belief or action.
v. 有主动词 verb
  1. to think through logically, as a problem.
  2. to conclude or infer.
  3. to convince, persuade, etc., by reasoning.
  4. to support with reasons.

bring to reason 近义词

bring to reason

等同于 convince

更多bring to reason例句

  1. We have reason to believe these kinds of viruses spread better when it’s cold.
  2. Today, Feynman’s “dippy process” has become as ubiquitous in physics as calculus, and its mechanics reveal the reasons for some of the discipline’s greatest successes and its current challenges.
  3. There are a number of reasons why a particular virus might be more active during certain times of year.
  4. Comparing these results with 2016 exit polling is tricky for a few reasons.
  5. One of the reasons for this behavior is that consumers who would ordinarily visit stores are buying online to avoid potential exposure to the virus.
  6. When twelve people are killed by violence, whoever they are, for whatever reason, that is a tragedy and a waste.
  7. The research literature, too, asks these questions, and not without reason.
  8. The reason we were liberals is we were against oppression.
  9. There is a larger reason, beyond the airlines themselves, why Lion Air and 61 other Indonesian airlines are on this black list.
  10. Yet, for god knows what reason, his name is never brought up in the “Great American Filmmaker” conversation.
  11. To Americans Mrs. Wright is interesting by reason of her patriotism, which amounted to a passion.
  12. Wordsworth has illustrated how an unwise and importunate demand for a reason from a child may drive him into invention.
  13. And she fell to scolding him in the way he usually loved,—but at the moment found less stimulating for some reason.
  14. The reason we associate rhythm with the significance of time is that rhythm is a measurer of time.
  15. That she had her definite reason he knew, as a woman knows when another woman is wearing a last year's gown.