denoting 的定义
de·not·ed, de·not·ing.
- to be a mark or sign of; indicate: A fever often denotes an infection.
- to be a name or designation for; mean.
- to represent by a symbol; stand as a symbol for.
denoting 近义词
designate, mean
更多denoting例句
- Finals rematches denote whether a combination ever occurred before in the history of the Stanley Cup Final.
- So many sets of parentheses show up on the latest oil company earnings reports denoting losses that long columns of figures seem to be doing a shimmy right on the page.
- The lyrical mosaic of “Etta and Ella on the Upper West Side” denotes a play-builder in her prime.
- To try to find that second location, he took pictures, tried to match them to his maps, and marked down the labeled sticks denoting mining claims.
- One of the things that happened early on is that the government at the federal level basically denoted which businesses they viewed as essential businesses.
- The video has since been reinstated with an adult content warning denoting explicit material.
- Others were tying pieces of the orange plastic around their arms, apparently denoting their “media center” status.
- He distinguished them from other bureau files by calling them “confidential,” denoting secrecy.
- Sixth, the (p. 264) last, is the mark denoting the number of cigars in the box.
- Superlatives and all words denoting comparison should be used with stinginess.
- By a general word is meant a word common to or denoting a large number of ideas.
- Language is an important means of denoting the intricate thread of history in savage nations.
- Its substantives are provided with adjective inflections, denoting size and quality.