flux / flʌks /

💦中学词汇焊剂通量涨潮涨幅

flux3 个定义

n. 名词 noun
  1. a flowing or flow.
  2. the flowing in of the tide.
  3. continuous change, passage, or movement: His political views are in a state of flux.
v. 有主动词 verb
  1. to melt; make fluid.
  2. to fuse by the use of flux.
  3. Obsolete. to purge.
v. 无主动词 verb
  1. to flow.

flux 近义词

n. 名词 noun

state of constant change

更多flux例句

  1. How these schools respond to a situation that’s still very much in flux, even at the most cautious campuses, could determine whether or not we see another massive nationwide spike in the coronavirus outbreak in the next weeks and months.
  2. With election conditions in flux because of the pandemic, it’s especially important to ensure you’re getting information from trustworthy sources such as state and local election websites.
  3. At least for the days preceding Election Day, and definitely for the week immediately after, when the results are likely to be in serious flux as states count mail ballots.
  4. It’s an understatement to say ad budgets are in flux right now.
  5. There is a lot that is in flux and is changing, and as entrepreneur you have to know those downs are going to be followed by ups.
  6. Cheerleaders fall in love with freaks, jocks aspire to be indie musicians, and relationships are in a constant state of flux.
  7. Twitter, like the national debt or Lindsay Lohans's sobriety, is in a constant state of flux.
  8. Shaquille was formed within a dynamic that was at once very stable, and at the same time in predictable flux.
  9. Stem cell differentiation involves a plethora of regulatory factors and signals that are in a constant state of flux.
  10. The Good Wife introduced its potentially fatal fatality into a world already in flux.
  11. Or, perhaps, they have never got accustomed to the speed and fury of the river's flux, or the miracle of its continuous body.
  12. The flux of pattern dimmed, then hesitated; blanked out and heroically began anew.
  13. But man, immersed in the flux of sensualities, can never fully attain this knowledge of God, the object of all rational inquiry.
  14. That perpetual flux and reflux of peoples of all stations drew ever more the eyes of Europe to the Orient.
  15. It is said by some that he there died of vexation because he could not discover the cause of the flux and reflux of the Euripus.