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experiments

/noun ik-sper-uh-muhnt; verb ek-sper-uh-ment/US // noun ɪkˈspɛr ə mənt; verb ɛkˈspɛr əˌmɛnt //

实验,实验性,实验性的,实验结果

Related Words

Definitions

n.名词 noun
  1. 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.
    • : the conducting of such operations; experimentation: a product that is the result of long experiment.
    • : Obsolete. experience.
v.无主动词 verb
  1. 1
    • : to try or test, especially in order to discover or prove something: to experiment with a new procedure.

Synonyms & Antonyms

nouninvestigation, test
Synonyms

Examples

  • IBM hopes that a platform like RoboRXN could dramatically speed up that process by predicting the recipes for compounds and automating experiments.

  • The hope there is for improved sensitivity in searches for dark matter or experiments that might reveal some long-sought flaws in our standard model of particle physics.

  • The experiment represents early progress toward the possible development of an ultra-secure communications network beamed from space.

  • The new experiment represents, however, the first time scientists have applied machine learning to “validation,” a further step toward confirming results that involves additional statistical calculation.

  • At first, the sites amounted to experiments on the outer edges of the crypto universe, but in 2020 they have started to attract real money.

  • To put it rather uncharitably, the USPHS practiced a major dental experiment on a city full of unconsenting subjects.

  • If the noble experiment of American democracy is to mean anything, it is fidelity to the principle of freedom.

  • A classroom experiment seeks to demonstrate what it looks like.

  • This video, courtesy of BuzzFeed, tries a bit of an experiment to get some answers.

  • In the fall of 1992, Booker became a vegetarian “as an experiment,” he said, “and I was surprised by how much my body took to it.”

  • With Bacon, experientia does not always mean observation; and may mean either experience or experiment.

  • I made the experiment two years ago, and all my experience since has corroborated the conclusion then arrived at.

  • But this is quite enough to justify the inconsiderable expense which the experiment I urge would involve.

  • He commenced to experiment in electro-pneumatics in the year 1860, and early in 1861 communicated his discoveries to Mr. Barker.

  • Readers will doubtless be familiar with the well-known experiment illustrating this point.