discrepance 的定义
plural dis·crep·an·cies for 2.
- the state or quality of being discrepant or in disagreement, as by displaying an unexpected or unacceptable difference; inconsistency: The discrepancy between the evidence and his account of what happened led to his arrest.
- an instance of difference or inconsistency: There are certain discrepancies between the two versions of the story.
discrepance 近义词
discrepancy
更多discrepance例句
- A buyer, of course, can walk away if the appraisal reveals a massive discrepancy.
- The discrepancy can be chalked up to a decline in the average selling price of the products.
- There’s going to be discrepancies if you deal with 100 of something.
- The PPP loan program, however, has faced discrepancies in how loans were allocated across race and gender.
- Those additional terms are expected to be too small to account for the discrepancy.
- Tweedy had gone online to research a small discrepancy in a pair of Mormon texts.
- "The discrepancy may have been that we really don't see black or white among our colleagues," Zoll said.
- By no means does this discrepancy indicate that Barnard is necessarily safer for women.
- But there is a discrepancy in the way masturbation is discussed in regards to men and women.
- He claims in his complaint that the agency never clarified the discrepancy nor did it pay Shanklin the $35,000.
- How, then, are we to explain this extraordinary discrepancy between human power and resulting human happiness?
- There was, of course, a ridiculous discrepancy between this latter demand and the magnitude of his fortune.
- By this method a line can be reserved for each hand, and any discrepancy in the scores at once rectified.
- Westphal attributes this strange discrepancy to the accidental displacing of some words in the MSS.
- This consideration brings the two places into such close agreement that any hypothesis involving discrepancy is most improbable.