Skip to main content

content

/kon-tent/US // ˈkɒn tɛnt //UK // (ˈkɒntɛnt) //

内容,含量,内容简介

Related Words

Definitions

n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : Usually contents. something that is contained: the contents of a box.the subjects or topics covered in a book or document.the chapters or other formal divisions of a book or document: a table of contents.
    • : something that is to be expressed through some medium, as speech, writing, or any of various arts: a poetic form adequate to a poetic content.
    • : significance or profundity; meaning: a clever play that lacks content.
    • : substantive information or creative material viewed in contrast to its actual or potential manner of presentation: publishers, record companies, and other content providers; a flashy website, but without much content.
    • : that which may be perceived in something: the latent versus the manifest content of a dream.
    • : Philosophy, Logic. the sum of the attributes or notions comprised in a given conception; the substance or matter of cognition.
    • : power of containing; holding capacity: The bowl's content is three quarts.
    • : volume, area, or extent; size.
    • : the amount contained.
    • : Linguistics. the system of meanings or semantic values specific to a language.
    • : Mathematics.the greatest common divisor of all the coefficients of a given polynomial.Compare primitive polynomial. any abstraction of the concept of length, area, or volume.

Synonyms & Antonyms

Examples

  • We’re growing our media business overall, which includes news content, it includes video content that may be more top of funnel.

  • To boost the reach of some of their sites’ content, some of Red’s sites have also forged partnerships with other media companies.

  • “The Pro Shop is really an affiliate marketing strategy on steroids,” DeChiaro said, and his goal for it is to “shorten the bridge between content and commerce.”

  • “Our third party fact checkers have rated this content which means it is not allowed to run as an ad and any organic posts will receive a label,” Kearns added.

  • Discovery-owned Eurosport lost around 4,500 hours of content and programming it had scheduled between March and August for its TV and over-the-top platforms amid coronavirus lockdowns — including the 2020 Tokyo Olympics.

  • “It happens very often that the form smothers the content,” he says.

  • For example, a common type of meteorite has similar mineral content to Earth, but a lot less deuterium.

  • And while the HBOs and the Netflixs of the world are trying to deliver their content in new ways, so to are service providers.

  • Legacy content providers are increasingly offering their shows directly to viewers through the Internet.

  • This 16 percent, known as the “cut,” is colorless in nature, and it is “reaped” with a typical alcohol content of 69.8 percent.

  • I am therefore quite sure I shall be content to await his father's consent, should it not come these many years.

  • The life of a laborer that is content with what he hath, shall be sweet, and in it thou shalt find a treasure.

  • If we are to have a real education along lines of expression we must begin with the "content," or cause, of expression.

  • Few whose estates might yield them ten thousand a year are content with nine thousand.

  • There are many excellent makers, but we must content ourselves with briefly noticing the most prominent.