Skip to main content

life cycle

生命周期,寿命周期,生活周期,生命循环

Related Words

Definitions

n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : Biology. the continuous sequence of changes undergone by an organism from one primary form, as a gamete, to the development of the same form again.
    • : a series of stages, as childhood and middle age, that characterize the course of existence of an individual, group, or culture.
    • : any similar series of stages: the life cycle of a manufactured product.

Synonyms & Antonyms

Examples

  • When compared across their entire life cycles, electric vehicles create 60 to 80 percent fewer greenhouse emissions than combustion-powered cars.

  • So given that we’ve already paid the upfront cost of this fossil fuel infrastructure, the economics don’t quite line up yet where we’re going to facilitate a rapid phase out of fossil fuel plants prior to the end of their life cycle.

  • With this in mind, we built Alula to support people, families, and friends through the entire life cycle of cancer, from diagnosis and treatment to recovery and bereavement.

  • Positioned now on both sides of an advertising transaction, we were ready to observe the life cycle of an ad click from end to end.

  • So do Jenny Freestone’s elegant depictions of aquatic creatures, in which the life cycle of eggs, insects and amphibians is revealed as something rich and strange.

  • His life as a man is built around health insurance and tax services.

  • It was also an attack on our freedom of expression and way of life.

  • I always wanted my life to be that way, and it became that way.

  • I liked it because it was like my life coming back together.

  • When the father arrived at the hospital, he was told that Andrew Dossi was in surgery, but the wounds were not life-threatening.

  • Now, it immediately occurred to Davy that he had never in his whole life had all the plums he wanted at any one time.

  • Dean Swift was indeed a misanthrope by theory, however he may have made exception to private life.

  • We shall recover again some or all of the steadfastness and dignity of the old religious life.

  • It is the dramatic impulse of childhood endeavouring to bring life into the dulness of the serious hours.

  • Woman is mistress of the art of completely embittering the life of the person on whom she depends.