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moderation

/mod-uh-rey-shuhn/US // ˌmɒd əˈreɪ ʃən //UK // (ˌmɒdəˈreɪʃən) //

节制,适度,温和,温和的

Related Words

Definitions

n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : the quality of being moderate; restraint; avoidance of extremes or excesses; temperance.
    • : the act of moderating.
    • : moderations, British. the first public examinations at Oxford University for the B.A. degree in mathematics or in classics.

Synonyms & Antonyms

nountemperance

Examples

  • “Until now, content moderation was basically done by the last person at Facebook or Twitter as we have seen — either Mark Zuckerberg or the other platform directors,” Thorning-Schmidt said.

  • Half of Washington thinks that there should be more moderation and that the platforms should be more restrictive.

  • As more people began discussing Covid-19 on Nextdoor, the company — similar to platforms like Facebook and Twitter — expanded its moderation policies surrounding the pandemic.

  • In the past few years, the “mindful drinking” movement has evolved to embrace nuanced, positive frameworks for approaching sobriety or moderation.

  • Unlike in the United States, Twitter has historically miserably failed to perform the tiniest level of content moderation in India.

  • This would, of course, require some moderation of regulatory standards, particularly in reference to climate change.

  • Thus it seems likely that instead of striking a new tone of moderation, the new GOP Congress will return to its old tricks.

  • “I have chosen a ‘middle-ground’ method of moderation, a sort of behind-the-scenes prodding,” he wrote in a posting.

  • Maybe the key, as with so many other foods, lies in consuming artificially sweetened goods in moderation.

  • Given that Begich, Hagan, Landrieu and Pryor each hail from states that went for Mitt Romney, moderation is a matter of survival.

  • As railway secretary of the Board of Trade he was particularly distinguished for tact, strength and moderation.

  • As a man, moderation and justice lay at the root of his character, and they account largely for his success as a statesman.

  • He was a brave admiral, who took Constantinople, 1203, and had the moderation to refuse the imperial dignity.

  • It may be carried to an excess, and so admit of these objections, but in moderation the custom is a good and pleasant one.

  • His former reputation for gentleness and moderation was injured; and scoffers cried triumphantly: "See, even he also!"