Skip to main content

conditions

/kuhn-dish-uhn/US // kənˈdɪʃ ən //UK // (kənˈdɪʃən) //

条件,状况,情况,条件是

Related Words

Definitions

n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : a particular mode of being of a person or thing; existing state; situation with respect to circumstances.
    • : state of health: He was reported to be in critical condition.
    • : fit or requisite state: to be out of condition; to be in no condition to run.
    • : social position: in a lowly condition.
    • : a restricting, limiting, or modifying circumstance: It can happen only under certain conditions.
    • : a circumstance indispensable to some result; prerequisite; that on which something else is contingent: conditions of acceptance.
    • : Usually conditions. existing circumstances: poor living conditions.
    • : something demanded as an essential part of an agreement; provision; stipulation: He accepted on one condition.
    • : Law. a stipulation in an agreement or instrument transferring property that provides for a change consequent on the occurrence or nonoccurrence of a stated event.the event upon which this stipulation depends.
    • : Informal. an abnormal or diseased state of part of the body: heart condition; skin condition.
    • : U.S. Education. a requirement imposed on a college student who fails to reach the prescribed standard in a course at the end of the regular period of instruction, permitting credit to be established by later performance.the course or subject to which the requirement is attached.
    • : Grammar. protasis.
    • : Logic. the antecedent of a conditional proposition.
v.有主动词 verb
  1. 1
    • : to put in a fit or proper state.
    • : to accustom or inure: to condition oneself to the cold.
    • : to air-condition.
    • : to form or be a condition of; determine, limit, or restrict as a condition.
    • : to subject to particular conditions or circumstances: Her studies conditioned her for her job.
    • : U.S. Education. to impose a condition on.
    • : to test to ascertain its condition.
    • : to make a condition; stipulate.
    • : Psychology. to establish a conditioned response in.
    • : Textiles. to test for the presence of moisture or other foreign matter.to replace moisture lost from in manipulation or manufacture.
v.无主动词 verb
  1. 1
    • : to make conditions.

Synonyms & Antonyms

Examples

  • There were also crashes not due to either mechanical or human error but to a lack of warning of dangerous conditions.

  • By 2011, Airbus was working on a program to replicate these conditions in a flight simulator for use in pilot training.

  • Air traffic controllers and pilots together take great care not to fly in conditions that can jeopardize an airplane.

  • As night fell, the rescue operation slowed and sea conditions worsened.

  • The birds are debeaked, suffer ulcers, and terrible feet conditions.

  • Where the outside conditions are not very favourable, practically all the British species may be grown with ease under glass.

  • Whatever the species, it is well to imitate the natural conditions as much as possible in the way of soil.

  • In such conditions many kinds which do not flourish very freely in the open garden, grow into handsome specimens.

  • Tom—I felt out of myself in a way—as though I'd escaped—into—into quite different conditions——'

  • Conditions in the new country had gone from bad to worse, and if the season should experience another drought, the worst was come.