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conceptual

/kuhn-sep-choo-uhl/US // kənˈsɛp tʃu əl //UK // (kənˈsɛptjʊəl) //

概念性,概念性的,概念化,构想

Related Words

Definitions

adj.形容词 adjective
  1. 1
    • : pertaining to concepts or to the forming of concepts.

Synonyms & Antonyms

Examples

  • That forces you to refine your understanding, to revise your conceptual system.

  • Gender is just one aspect of identity that could influence topics, conceptual approaches and specific methodologies used in a wide range of scientific disciplines.

  • Nevo said even state-of-the-art flood forecasting had previously relied on hydrologic models that were based largely on maps of local topography and conceptual principles derived from physics.

  • Understanding how to deal with this conceptual problem requires us to look at the theory in more detail.

  • Such conceptual difficulties are usually ignored by practicing physicists.

  • They wrote some big checks so we could do the conceptual work.

  • “There is a conceptual leap that the first assessor used,” Feldman said.

  • I'm aware of this in all my work, and try to anticipate it as much as possible at the very beginning conceptual stages.

  • Actually, movement conservatives who turn against Wall Street are on the verge of breaking important new conceptual ground.

  • If the "Screen Tests" can seem like a mostly conceptual gambit, it's clear that  in some cases their visual subtleties matter.

  • Among the conceptual terms in the Aristotelian logic few play a more important part than those of substance and accident.

  • Is it not as arbitrarily lifted out of the living sentence as is the minimum conceptual element out of the word?

  • Were a language ever completely “grammatical,” it would be a perfect engine of conceptual expression.

  • The word sing cannot, as a matter of fact, be freely used to refer to its own conceptual content.

  • Both the phonetic and conceptual structures show the instinctive feeling of language for form.