tangibleness 的 2 个定义
- capable of being touched; discernible by the touch; material or substantial.
- real or actual, rather than imaginary or visionary: the tangible benefits of sunshine.
- definite; not vague or elusive: no tangible grounds for suspicion.
- having actual physical existence, as real estate or chattels, and therefore capable of being assigned a value in monetary terms.
- something tangible, especially a tangible asset.
tangibleness 近义词
tangibility
更多tangibleness例句
- The above outlines just a few examples of the challenges facing Google as a business, which will likely have a tangible impact on search.
- That subject, like the conflict of Choice’s street scenes, is tangible and immediate.
- By taking advantage of semantic search opportunities, a retailer offers a potential customer more tangible, relevant information on a product of interest, and the retailer has a clear path to an already interested buyer for a specific product.
- So watching Bidenworld move in his first full week in office was like trying to make sense of smoke — always moving, never tangible and ever open to interpretation.
- He cautioned though that it will take months for the vaccine program to have a tangible impact on the disease.
- When it comes to tangible gifts, the sharing economy really starts to flex its holiday disrupting muscle.
- A wine list and a short bar menu sitting on each table seemed tangible enough.
- In the world of Google, where all information feels tangible, people think they deserve to know everything.
- Relationships that have blossomed via social media and the Internet can feel just as real as any tangible one.
- For Panetta, the act of using force is seemingly more important than the actual tangible result achieved by using force.
- Fascination is despotic; beauty is something more tangible and independent of opinion.
- He had been something real and tangible in that shadowy place—something familiar in an unfamiliar world.
- His figure filled the dark and empty places in the illusion, and made it warm, tangible and complete.
- Philosophy went out of fashion, since it brought no outward and tangible good.
- From the standpoint of tangible requirements, three rooms on a silent upper floor was their idea of a perfect lodging.