ruling out / rul /

排除排除了排除在外排斥

ruling out4 个定义

n. 名词 noun
  1. a principle or regulation governing conduct, action, procedure, arrangement, etc.: the rules of chess.
  2. the code of regulations observed by a religious order or congregation: the Franciscan rule.
  3. the customary or normal circumstance, occurrence, manner, practice, quality, etc.: the rule rather than the exception.
v. 有主动词 verb

ruled, rul·ing.

  1. to control or direct; exercise dominating power, authority, or influence over; govern: to rule the empire with severity.
  2. to decide or declare judicially or authoritatively; decree: The judge ruled that he should be exiled.
  3. to mark with lines, especially parallel straight lines, with the aid of a ruler or the like: to rule paper.
v. 无主动词 verb

ruled, rul·ing.

  1. to exercise dominating power or influence; predominate.
  2. to exercise authority, dominion, or sovereignty.
  3. to make a formal decision or ruling, as on a point at law.
  4. to be prevalent or current: Higher prices ruled throughout France.
v. 动词组 verb
  1. rule out, to prove to be unrelated or not for consideration; eliminate; exclude: to rule out the possibility of error.to make impossible or impracticable: The rainstorm ruled out the holiday camping.

ruling out 近义词

v. 动词 verb

exclude, reject

ruling out构成的短语

  • rule of thumb
  • rule out
  • rule the roost
  • as a rule
  • exception proves the rule
  • ground rules

更多ruling out例句

  1. Our guys have been great about the rules and we’re adjusting.
  2. My rule of thumb is that if it cooks quickly at a high heat on the stovetop, it will cook quickly under the high heat of a broiler, too.
  3. General rules and guidelines are not likely to be the way to go, she says.
  4. He went back and forth over the legislature’s proposed vaccination rules and has struggled to convince teachers and administrators to reopen schools.
  5. Nextdoor would not comment on individual users but emphasized the site has rules in place against profanity, over-posting, and personal disputes.
  6. Obviously, the first obligation of all liberal democratic governments is to enforce the rule of law.
  7. And so the same creeping rot of the rule of law that the administration has inflicted on immigration now bedevils our drug laws.
  8. Rule 16(c) was a proposed change in the rules at the 1976 Republican Convention.
  9. The rule of law, you see, buckles, bends and sometimes crumbles under the weight of racism, sexism, and classism.
  10. His rule over the country came to an end in 1979 when the director of the KCIA shot Park and his bodyguard to death at dinner.
  11. All elements of expression modify each other, so that no mere rule can cover all cases.
  12. As a rule, however, even in the case of extreme varieties, a careful examination of the specimen will enable it to be identified.
  13. He set down as the second the golden rule, “Whatsoever ye would that men should do unto you, do ye even so to them.”
  14. Hence arise factions, dissensions, and loss to their religious interests and work; and these intruders seek to rule the others.
  15. This impulse to extend rule appears more plainly in many of the little ceremonial observances of the child.