relevance 的定义
- the condition of beingrelevant, or connected with the matter at hand: Some traditional institutions of the media lack relevance in this digital age.
relevance 近义词
pertinence
更多relevance例句
- You can find the relevance and also related queries, as well as which words are trending.
- The easiest way to earn this spot is by making your substance worthy by bringing forth relevance and quality.
- Poonen immediately saw its relevance to his previous, unfinished inquiry into tetrahedra.
- Over the years, Griffin has managed the difficult assignment of cloaking a company dependent on old texts in a contemporary relevance.
- From usability to the relevance of content and simple search functionality, Google wants to see that your site and content are the best answer.
- In a virtual world, it revives the relevance of authenticity.
- Meanwhile, the hypocritical pageants that rejected her continue to see their cultural relevance—and TV ratings—decline.
- The fact that the link transcended age group and demographic does speak to its relevance.
- Before finding resurging relevance on Mad Men, he competed on Dancing with the Stars, as did his wife, Lisa Rinna.
- During that time, his success mounted but he seemed to be distancing himself from cultural relevance.
- "I must ask counsel to put questions which have some relevance even to his own line of defence," remarked the judge sternly.
- Suppose we do not believe in secession, what relevance has that to the present subject?
- If we had succeeded in destroying the legal institutions, might not the question be put with equal relevance?
- I especially fail to see the relevance of the word 'treason.'
- No human situation is omitted; as a guide to conduct, philosophy has relevance for all.