study
研究,研究报告,学习,研究报告书
Related Words
Definitions
- 1
plural stud·ies.
- : application of the mind to the acquisition of knowledge, as by reading, investigation, or reflection: long hours of study.
- : the cultivation of a particular branch of learning, science, or art: the study of law.
- : Often studies. a personal effort to gain knowledge: to pursue one's studies.
- : something studied or to be studied: Balzac's study was human nature.
- : research or a detailed examination and analysis of a subject, phenomenon, etc.: She made a study of the transistor market for her firm.
- : a written account of such research, examination, or analysis: He published a study of Milton's poetry.
- : a well-defined, organized branch of learning or knowledge.
- : zealous endeavor or assiduous effort.
- : the object of such endeavor or effort.
- : deep thought, reverie, or a state of abstraction: He was lost in study and did not hear us come in.
- : a room, in a house or other building, set apart for private study, reading, writing, or the like.
- : Also called étude. Music. a composition that combines exercise in technique with a greater or lesser amount of artistic value.
- : Literature. a literary composition executed for exercise or as an experiment in a particular method of treatment.such a composition dealing in detail with a particular subject, as a single main character.
- : Art. something produced as an educational exercise, as a memorandum or record of observations or effects, or as a guide for a finished production: She made a quick pencil sketch of his hands as a study for the full portrait in oils.
- : a person, as an actor, considered in terms of his or her quickness or slowness in memorizing lines: a quick study.
- 1
stud·ied, stud·y·ing.
- : to apply oneself to the acquisition of knowledge, as by reading, investigation, or practice.
- : to apply oneself; endeavor.
- : to think deeply, reflect, or consider.
- : to take a course of study, as at a college.
- 1
stud·ied, stud·y·ing.
- : to apply oneself to acquiring a knowledge of.
- : to examine or investigate carefully and in detail: to study the political situation.
- : to observe attentively; scrutinize: to study a person's face.
- : to read carefully or intently: to study a book.
- : to endeavor to learn or memorize, as a part in a play.
- : to consider, as something to be achieved or devised.
- : to think out, as the result of careful consideration or devising.
Synonyms & Antonyms
Examples
Those studies are scheduled for completion over about the next year and a half.
The study tallied activity in more than a dozen different cryptocurrencies.
More recently, studies have reported on what the infection might do to the heart.
That’s according to a new study published in Science Advances.
The study, published Friday in the journal Environmental Research Letters, found this association in both rural counties in Louisiana and highly populated communities in New York.
She completed a yoga teacher-training program and, in the spring of 2008, went on a retreat in Peru to study with shamans.
In fact, in a recent study of their users internationally, it was the lowest priority for most.
But in the case of black women, another study found no lack of interest.
Indeed, study after study affirms the benefits of involved fatherhood for women and children.
A recent U.S. study found men get a “daddy bonus” —employers seem to like men who have children and their salaries show it.
"There's just one thing I'd like to ask, if you don't mind," said Cynthia, coming suddenly out of a brown study.
His lordship retired shortly to his study, Hetton and Mr. Haggard betook themselves to the billiard-room.
She began the study of drawing at the age of thirty, and her first attempt in oils was made seven years later.
In practice we find a good deal of technical study comes into the college stage.
Its backbone should be the study of biology and its substance should be the threshing out of the burning questions of our day.