objects / noun ˈɒb dʒɪkt, -dʒɛkt; verb əbˈdʒɛkt /

对象物体物件物品

objects3 个定义

n. 名词 noun
  1. anything that is visible or tangible and is relatively stable in form.
  2. a thing, person, or matter to which thought or action is directed: an object of medical investigation.
  3. the end toward which effort or action is directed; goal; purpose: Profit is the object of business.
v. 无主动词 verb
  1. to offer a reason or argument in opposition.
  2. to express or feel disapproval, dislike, or distaste; be averse.
  3. to refuse or attempt to refuse to permit some action, speech, etc.
v. 有主动词 verb
  1. to state, claim, or cite in opposition; put forward in objection, disagreement, or disapproval: Some people objected that the proposed import duty would harm world trade.
  2. Archaic. to bring forward or adduce in opposition.

objects 近义词

n. 名词 noun

thing able to be seen/felt/perceived

n. 名词 noun

purpose, use

n. 名词 noun

aim, recipient

v. 动词 verb

disagree, argue against

更多objects例句

  1. Physicists don’t usually deal with objects of different sizes at the same time.
  2. Powerful gusts not only blow objects around, they also churn up massive waves called storm surges.
  3. When you only look at things close-up, your eyes don’t get practice focusing on distant objects.
  4. GPT-3’s word embeddings are not perceptually grounded in the world, which explains why it often struggles to consistently answer common-sense questions about visual and physical features of familiar objects.
  5. It’s not yet clear what this object is and what its purpose might be.
  6. But by far the most interesting object, which held enormous fascination for me, sat high up on the top shelf.
  7. And who better to do that with than the actress who is playing the object of said (alleged) lesbian affection in the flick?
  8. If they run off with somebody else, we say they were stolen—as if they are an object or a commodity.
  9. He can barely speak the titles, but manages to let Viridiana and That Obscure Object of Desire pass from his lips.
  10. The show, Bell Hooks argued in Black Looks: Race and Representation, “represents wom[e]n as the object of a phallocentric gaze.”
  11. The thought seemed to produce the dreaded object, for next moment a large hummock appeared right ahead.
  12. Naturally the conversation fell on the all-absorbing topic of the day and the object of his mission.
  13. To make the effort of articulation a vital impulse in response to a mental concept,—this is the object sought.
  14. The object of this practise is to attain facility in manipulating the elements while maintaining the smooth quality of the tone.
  15. Every time he is dressed, or sees his mother dress, he has an object-lesson in symmetrical arrangement.