real world / ˈri əl, ril /

现实世界真实世界真实的世界现实世界中

real world 的定义

n. 名词 noun
  1. the realm of practical or actual experience, as opposed to the abstract, theoretical, or idealized sphere of the classroom, laboratory, etc.: recent college graduates looking for jobs in the real world of rising unemployment.

real world 近义词

n. 名词 noun

things as they are

更多real world例句

  1. These episodes exposed the many new complications created by the NBA’s decision to return to the real world.
  2. I’m not a very “online” person, so someone who wants to do lots of stuff in the real world.
  3. Maybe we’ll finally find a way to figure out what actually happens to the head during a crash so we can design helmets for the real world, not the lab.
  4. Swapping mirrors to the different rooms of the dollhouse would open new portals in the real world.
  5. Family parties weren't a feature of our pre-pandemic life, and these family members rarely, if ever, saw one another in the real world, except at weddings and funerals.
  6. But along with the cartoon funk is an all-too-real story of police brutality embodied by a horde of evil Pigs.
  7. The world that Black Dynamite lives in is not the most PC place to be in.
  8. Have a look at this telling research from Pew on blasphemy and apostasy laws around the world.
  9. Allegations of transphobia are not new in the world of gay online dating.
  10. People watch night soaps because the genre allows them to believe in a world where people just react off their baser instincts.
  11. Descending the Alps to the east or south into Piedmont, a new world lies around and before you.
  12. All over the world the just claims of organized labor are intermingled with the underground conspiracy of social revolution.
  13. There seems something in that also which I could spare only very reluctantly from a new Bible in the world.
  14. That it is a reasonable and proper thing to ask our statesmen and politicians: what is going to happen to the world?
  15. The "new world" was really found in the wonder-years of the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries.