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inclusive of

/in-kloo-siv/US // ɪnˈklu sɪv //UK // (ɪnˈkluːsɪv) //

包括,其中包括,包含,包括以下内容

Related Words

Definitions

adj.形容词 adjective
  1. 1
    • : including or encompassing the stated limit or extremes in consideration or account: from May to August inclusive.
    • : including a great deal, or encompassing everything concerned; comprehensive: an inclusive art form; an inclusive fee.
    • : enclosing; embracing: an inclusive fence.
    • : aiming to include and integrate all people and groups in activities, organizations, political processes, etc., especially those who are disadvantaged, have suffered discrimination, or are living with disabilities: inclusive hiring practices;inclusive playgrounds.
    • : relating to or being language or terminology that does not exclude a particular group of people and that avoids bias, stereotypes, etc.: the use of singular “they” as an inclusive, gender-neutral pronoun.
    • : relating to or being educational practices in which students with physical or mental disabilities are taught in regular classrooms and provided with certain accommodations.
    • : Grammar. including the person or persons spoken to, as we in Shall we dance?Compare exclusive.

Synonyms & Antonyms

Examples

  • With this new project, she hopes that delving into topics that might seem taboo will help make both of those worlds more inclusive.

  • Rutter and Foley see their campaign as part of a larger effort to make birding more inclusive.

  • The neither-nor quality of this period is somehow inclusive.

  • Specifically, Virtue asked for input on a DE&I vocabulary guide, an inclusive creative best practices document and a DE&I red flag language guide that it had adapted from Vice-owned publication Refinery29.

  • Two LGBTQ-inclusive films, The Life Ahead and Two Of Us, were nominated for Best Picture.

  • Triton prices the 1000/3 LP at a cool $3.15 million—inclusive of pilot training.

  • He is a lawyer for AIDS-Free World, which pushes for more active and gay-inclusive policies to combat HIV.

  • Its 8-megapixel camera, inclusive of true-tone and dual-LED f/2.2 aperture flashes, features optical image stabilization.

  • But IBC is also a fair bit more inclusive in its definition of war casualties.

  • The Institute for Inclusive Security commissioned her to write this article.

  • Keel outside garboard strake, inclusive of thickness of keelband, (p. 151) if any, shall not exceed in depth 1½ in.

  • In every other department of life they are apparently regarded as inferior or inclusive beings.

  • In the conference and prayer-room, the native teachers use the inclusive pronominal form of Father, altogether.

  • The following is the value in dollars of the imports and exports of the island from 1870 to 1874, inclusive.

  • His sphere of operations he plainly conceives to be from Malta, eastward, to Syria inclusive.