experimenter / noun ɪkˈspɛr ə mənt; verb ɛkˈspɛr əˌmɛnt /

试验者实验者实验员试验员

experimenter2 个定义

n. 名词 noun
  1. a test, trial, or tentative procedure; an act or operation for the purpose of discovering something unknown or of testing a principle, supposition, etc.: a chemical experiment; a teaching experiment; an experiment in living.
  2. the conducting of such operations; experimentation: a product that is the result of long experiment.
  3. Obsolete. experience.
v. 无主动词 verb
  1. to try or test, especially in order to discover or prove something: to experiment with a new procedure.

experimenter 近义词

experimenter

等同于 inventor

experimenter

等同于 rebel

experimenter

等同于 researcher

experimenter

等同于 insurrectionary

experimenter

等同于 insurrectionist

experimenter

等同于 revolutionist

experimenter

等同于 explorer

更多experimenter例句

  1. There are any number of hot drinks you could do in this large-format, fire pit mode, so I invite you to find a favorite recipe and experiment with scaling it up.
  2. Human eyes also had a harder time spotting camouflaged plants in an online experiment, suggesting that the camouflage actually works.
  3. This winter, as part of this grand experiment, even Coloradans might be able to snake a few linked powder turns together in untracked snow after the third run.
  4. Still, “people have dreamt about how to do an experiment,” says Anders Nilsson of Stockholm University.
  5. Because typically there’s nothing like a randomized experiment going on.
  6. When Obama took office in 2009, Michelle became the great experimenter of fashion, the great celebrator of little-known talent.
  7. Moore has been less of a hard-core cougar and more of an experimenter.
  8. This visionary was in reality a philosopher, that is to say, an experimenter and a manipulator of general ideas.
  9. It may happen that the experimenter's telegraph line is out of order and the trouble cannot be found.
  10. Lancaster rolled up his sleeves with the rest and let Karen take over the leadership—she was the best experimenter.
  11. For a little while everything seemed going beautifully, and the experimenter was full of hope.
  12. And the ore was pronounced “good”—a proof either of gross deception, or gross ignorance in the experimenter.