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tiered

/teerd/US // tɪərd //

分层的,分层,层次分明,层级

Definitions

adj.形容词 adjective
  1. 1
    • : being or arranged in tiers or layers: a two-tiered box of chocolates.

Examples

  • Many standard joint accounts just give every user entire access to other users’ finances, versus tiered ways to spend.

  • The state had laid out this tiered system of vaccines, which was what we were planning on.

  • Towns use a variety of formulas and tiered calculations to determine the size of an individual officer’s benefit.

  • She is worried that unless people who are vaccinated continue to wear masks, the United States could become a two-tiered society in which people who are inoculated say, “I can do what I want.”

  • She said her 5-year-old son, who is autistic, was excited when schools reopened three weeks ago to prekindergarten and special-ed cluster students, under the district’s tiered plan.

  • “All training is tiered to the level of risk each person may encounter,” said USAMRIID spokeswoman Caree Vander Linden.

  • A table on the three-tiered deck of Louie's Backyard is an enchanting place to dine, especially in the evening.

  • A tiered licensing system could apply to different types of weapons.

  • I do not believe such a two-tiered system will come to pass.

  • But then he vowed to hold the line against a tiered system of justice in America.

  • She rose and, lighting the wick at the wavering crown of tiered tapers, placed it so that it dominated all the rest.

  • To the right was a dense evergreen forest; small tiered mountains to the left.

  • The tiered roofs of the royal Messighit rise above the atap dwellings of the rustic Court, still professing a slack Mohammedanism.

  • If they are used, each side of the wall is increased by two tiles, making each side a double tiered row of 18 tiles side by side.

  • A little girl who boasted curls, yellow curls in tiered rows about her head.