cohort 的定义
- a group or company: She has a cohort of admirers.
- a companion or associate.
- one of the ten divisions in an ancient Roman legion, numbering from 300 to 600 soldiers.
- any group of soldiers or warriors.
- an accomplice; abettor: He got off with probation, but his cohorts got ten years apiece.
- a group of persons sharing a particular statistical or demographic characteristic: the cohort of all children born in 1980.
- Biology. an individual in a population of the same species.
cohort 近义词
partner in activity
更多cohort例句
- Forage did not disclose efficacy information, but said that “some” corporate partners hired up to 52% of the cohort from their programs.
- Core to the WSJ’s digital ad buoyancy is its cohort of business-to-business advertiser clients.
- Not only that, in deferring to the women in their lives, these investors weren’t even consulting the right demographic cohorts.
- What we can say with confidence is that software shares are in a technical correction, and other equities cohorts that we care about are not far behind.
- So, DTC startups are looking to capitalize on the exponential growth they are seeing right now by trying to figure out how they can better cater to this new cohort of Covid customers.
- Good luck finding that cohort of “naïve” participants, noble goal though that it is.
- The middle cohort of those voters—Americans in their twenties—were alive during the 1990s, but not politically aware.
- Can a group of establishment senators break him, as a previous cohort, led by Margaret Chase Smith, broke Joe McCarthy?
- It is mostly this same cohort - 18 to 24 year olds - who buy and play war games.
- Here was a cohort, after all, that grew up thinking that it could, and would, change the world.
- It must have covered about eighty acres, and was garrisoned by the first cohort of Vetasii from Brabant.
- Between and among all which masses flows without limit Saint-Antoine and the Menadic cohort.
- An elevator took the determined Persis and her cohort up to another thronged vestibule.
- As soon as they descried the army which was approaching, they threw themselves on those which were at the head of the cohort.
- Pretorie, s. the Roman imperial body-guard, the Pretorian cohort, B 1.