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intervention

/in-ter-ven-shuhn/US // ˌɪn tərˈvɛn ʃən //UK // (ˌɪntəˈvɛnʃən) //

干预,干预措施,介入,干预行动

Related Words

Definitions

n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : the act or fact of intervening.
    • : interposition or interference of one state in the affairs of another.

Synonyms & Antonyms

Examples

  • With so much research to wade through, it’s hard to know what to trust — and I say that as someone who makes a living researching what types of interventions motivate people to change their behaviors.

  • Researchers have rightly realized that individual variation is just as important as the average response to an intervention.

  • He will try to avoid using his military for an overt intervention, fearful that this would provoke another round of Western sanctions.

  • That kind of legal intervention would take unprecedented advocacy.

  • The ability to measure and detect it could help identify those at risk and pave the way for new kinds of interventions.

  • But South Koreans have a troubled history with American intervention in Korean markets.

  • American intervention in Korea has frequently sparked protests, especially over film.

  • My family is ready to mount an intervention, and cancel my streaming accounts.

  • The second intervention was much more blatant and actually occurred in the middle of an election campaign.

  • Mitochondrial intervention is the practice of replacing DNA that carries a genetic disease.

  • I cannot see in science, nor in experience, nor in history any signs of such a God, nor of such intervention.

  • De Robeck agrees that we don't know enough yet to warrant us in fault-finding or intervention.

  • That money was formerly collected and placed in the treasury through the intervention of the royal officials.

  • Too near for reflection; too far for intervention: on tenter hooks, in fact; a sort of mental crucifixion.

  • The carriage was packed already and but for a friend's intervention I could not have been able to secure even a seat.