quantify 的定义
quan·ti·fied, quan·ti·fy·ing.
- to determine, indicate, or express the quantity of.
- Logic. to make explicit the quantity of.
- to give quantity to.
quantify 近义词
measure
更多quantify例句
- One way to stay on track is to quantify progress where possible.
- Of course, it’s hard to define fuzzy traits like positivity—and it’s an even more Herculean task to train an AI model to objectively quantify and measure them.
- It’s easy enough to quantify, in terms of military budgets and deployment costs.
- County spokeswoman Sarah Sweeney said it is too soon to quantify the longer-term impacts of 2020 on the fund.
- While previous studies have suggested that dolphins learn from peers, this study is the first to quantify the importance of social networks over other factors, says Sonja Wild, a behavioral ecologist at the University of Konstanz in Germany.
- But does the ability to quantify our babies take away from the natural process of parenting?
- He came back, and within years, Dutch East India was doing business, because they could then quantify the risk.
- The passage contradicts the knee-jerk reaction which wants to quantify suffering.
- But the industry was able to quantify the gains it would reap in injuries avoided and lives saved if they were mandatory.
- Though difficult to quantify, this generational factor hurt Mitt Romney last year.
- They quantify economic expectations, legal provisions, and tax consequences.
- Skim the fat from the gravy, which should be thickened by shaking in a very small quantify of flour.
- The degree of illiteracy is difficult to quantify, but the result is easy to notice.