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conjugate

/verb kon-juh-geyt; adjective, noun kon-juh-git, -geyt/US // verb ˈkɒn dʒəˌgeɪt; adjective, noun ˈkɒn dʒə gɪt, -ˌgeɪt //

共轭的,共轭,共轭式,共轭物

Related Words

Definitions

v.有主动词 verb
  1. 1

    con·ju·gat·ed, con·ju·gat·ing.

    • : Grammar. to inflect.to recite or display all or some subsets of the inflected forms of, in a fixed order: One conjugates the present tense of the verb “be” as “I am, you are, he is, we are, you are, they are.”
    • : to join together, especially in marriage.
v.无主动词 verb
  1. 1

    con·ju·gat·ed, con·ju·gat·ing.

    • : Biology. to unite; to undergo conjugation.
    • : Grammar. to be characterized by conjugation: The Latin verb esse does not conjugate in the passive voice.
adj.形容词 adjective
  1. 1
    • : joined together, especially in a pair or pairs; coupled.
    • : Botany. having only one pair of leaflets.
    • : Grammar. having a common derivation.
    • : Bibliography. forming one sheet.
    • : Mathematics. so related as to be interchangeable in the enunciation of certain properties. so related to a second element of a group that there exists a third element of the group that, multiplying one element on the right and the other element on the left, results in equal elements. differing only in the sign of the imaginary part.
    • : Chemistry. of or noting two or more liquids in equilibrium with one another. related by the loss or gain of a proton: NH3 is a base conjugate to NH4+.NH4+ is an acid conjugate to NH3.Also con·ju·gat·ed. containing two or more double bonds each separated from the other by a single bond.
n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : one of a group of conjugate words.
    • : Mathematics. either of two conjugate points, lines, etc.Also called complex conjugate, conjugate complex number. either of a pair of complex numbers of the type a + bi and a − bi, where a and b are real numbers and i is imaginary.

Synonyms & Antonyms

Examples

  • By far the most important of the conjugate sulphates and representative of the group is potassium indoxyl sulphate.

  • I had an old maid English teacher when I was a boy who made us conjugate to like instead of the more intimate and tender word.

  • When at last I dozed, in sheer exhaustion of mind and body, it became a vast shadowy verb which I had to conjugate.

  • I warrant we shall smile some day at our present desperate straits, and meanwhile "to wait" is the verb we must conjugate.'

  • When two ciliated infusoria conjugate they place themselves side by side, and connect for a time by means of a bridge of plasm.