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trajectile

/truh-jek-tuh-ree/US // trəˈdʒɛk tə ri //UK // (trəˈdʒɛktərɪ, -trɪ) //

轨迹,轨迹图,弹道,弹道导弹

Related Words

Definitions

n.名词 noun
  1. 1

    plural tra·jec·to·ries.

    • : the curve described by a projectile, rocket, or the like in its flight.
    • : Geometry. a curve or surface that cuts all the curves or surfaces of a given system at a constant angle.

Synonyms & Antonyms

Examples

  • In 2020, the trajectory of e-commerce is on an even steeper upward curve.

  • The city’s current deputy mayor for public safety, Susan Lee, says the improved trajectory could be attributed partly to Eddie Johnson, the police superintendent installed by then-Mayor Rahm Emanuel in April 2016.

  • Governments and businesses must move toward a new form of inclusiveness with built-in trajectory and compensation mechanisms for those who today benefit the least.

  • With high brand recognition, positive user signals, solid site performance and consistent quality management, the website visibility was good and on an upwards trajectory.

  • That’s also the trajectory of Google and its local business profiles.

  • On his present trajectory, Putin shows no signs that he will conform to international legal and moral norms.

  • Melville may be the most famous example, but Kafka, Kate Chopin, and many others followed a similar trajectory.

  • This would definitely not put us on the right trajectory heading into 2016.

  • The war back then was clearly becoming more sectarian and Islamic—the trajectory was obvious.

  • But, says Greason, “We only take work within 30 degrees of our base trajectory.”

  • By firing westwards, they could place an enfilade barrage of low trajectory bullets which swept the rides through the wood.

  • It executed a boomerang trajectory, lit again on the same spot, and began rubbing its legs as before.

  • Whatever the trajectory may be we see that the shell must necessarily arrive in a slanting direction.

  • The greater the velocity, the flatter the trajectory becomes.

  • The greater the velocity, the lower the trajectory, and the greater the chance of striking the target.