1.“She seems so spontaneous when she dances, and yet it’s very carefully calibrated,” he said.
英:[ˈkælɪbreɪt]
美:[ˈkælɪbreɪt]
vt.
校准
使标准化
使合标准
测量(枪的)口径
cal·i·brate
kae lih breIt
第三人称单数:calibrates
现在分词:calibrating
过去式:calibrated
过去分词:calibrated
calibration (n.), calibrator (n.)
词根:calibre
adj.calibrated 标刻度的
n.calibration 校准;刻度;标度
caliber [军] 口径;才干;水准(等于calibre);器量
calibre [军] 口径;才干;水准
v.calibrated 校准(calibrate的过去分词);校准使...标准化
verb
transitive verb
to ascertain the caliber of (something)
to determine, rectify, or mark the graduations of (something, such as a thermometer tube)
to standardize (something, such as a measuring instrument) by determining the deviation from a standard so as to ascertain the proper correction factors
to adjust precisely for a particular function
calibrate a thermometer
to measure preciselyespecially: to measure against a standard
carefully calibrate the dosage of a medicine
adjust, update, coordinate
"测量口径",1839年,动词形式由 caliber 和 -ate(2)组成。还可以指定任意刻度的不同部分的"相对价值"(1869)。相关词汇: calibrated; calibrating。
校准
检查
caliber + -ate >entry 4, perhaps after French calibrer
The first known use of calibrate was in 1850
calipernoun
a measuring instrument with two legs or jaws that can be adjusted to determine thickness, diameter, or distance between surfaces—usually used in plural
a pair of calipers
californiumnoun
an artificially prepared radioactive element see element
caliconoun
cotton cloth especially with a colored pattern printed on one side
a blotched or spotted animal
a calico cat
calibernoun
degree of excellence or importance
the diameter of a missile (as a bullet)
the inside diameter of a gun barrel
calibrateverb
to measure the caliber of
to determine, correct, or put the measuring marks on (as a tire pressure gauge)
make standard (as a measuring instrument) by finding out and correcting for the differences from an accepted or ideal value
calibrateverb
to measure the caliber of
to determine, correct, or put the measuring marks on (as a tire pressure gauge)
make standard (as a measuring instrument) by finding out and correcting for the differences from an accepted or ideal value
calibrateverb
to measure the caliber of
to determine, correct, or put the measuring marks on (as a tire pressure gauge)
make standard (as a measuring instrument) by finding out and correcting for the differences from an accepted or ideal value
calibrateverb
to measure the caliber of
to determine, correct, or put the measuring marks on (as a tire pressure gauge)
make standard (as a measuring instrument) by finding out and correcting for the differences from an accepted or ideal value
calibratetransitive verb
to ascertain the caliber of (as a thermometer tube)
to determine, rectify, or mark the graduations of (as a thermometer tube)
to standardize (as a measuring instrument) by determining the deviation from a standard so as to ascertain the proper correction factors
1.“She seems so spontaneous when she dances, and yet it’s very carefully calibrated,” he said.
2.“The Wife” is calibrated for maximum audience flattery: viewers are encouraged to nod in recognition at the literary milieu and clap their hands in self-congratulatory glee at the husband’s fall.
3.Lee’s depressive fog is expertly calibrated, and Affleck deserves all the accolades thrown his way.
4.Calibrate the mixed water outlet temperature by placing a thermometer in the mixed water stream.
在混合水流内放置温度计,校准混合水出口的温度。
5.But back to the whole reason I agreed to the 1994 endeavor: cognitive dissonance that leaves me unable to calibrate effort and reward.
6.Still, the Governors Awards is a crucial early stop in the campaign season — the Iowa Steak Fry of the Oscar hustings, where stump speeches are replaced by eye-catching gowns and perfectly calibrated small talk.
7.Rather than controlling the weather, the laser beam is actually used to calibrate the ESO's powerful telescopes.
不是要去控制天气,激光束实际上是用来校准欧洲南方天文台强大的望远镜。
8.But, most of the time, Harden’s carefully calibrated move is legal.
9.Partly, it’s that he has lost interest in sustaining the act, in always being “on,” to the degree so expertly practiced by his wife, whom Ms. Carroll calibrates with bravura skill.
10.And this little gadget here hooks your pressure-cooker up to a famous sous-chef in Catalunya who, with his iPod, will calibrate the temperature of your machine to continuously updated readings from Doppler radar ...
11.Everything about Bond movies – from Barbara Bach's cheekbones to the underwater harpoon battles – seems calibrated to appeal to the adolescent.
12.Prior to applying a gravity model, one has to calibrate the impedance function.
应用重力模型的之前, 你应该先校准阻抗函数.
13.As he proved with his heartfelt but puckishly funny score for “Spelling Bee,” Mr. Finn can be expert at calibrating an appealing balance of sentiment and humor in his songs.
14.As Norris scrambles to reunite with his dancer soul mate, and eventually outrun the Bureau's men intent on keeping him on plan, the film becomes a medium-speed, nicely calibrated chase.
15.With its share of courtroom drama, music industry shoptalk and thoughtful analysis, the series is finely calibrated to appeal to true-crime junkies, hip-hop fans and champions of social justice alike.
16.The vacuum leak can be calibrated with the absolute comparison method and the relative comparison method.
比对法漏率校准装置是计量气体漏率的一种装置,可绝对法和相对法对真空漏孔进行校准.
17.With the onset of the Korean War, he enlisted in the army, serving as an artillery sergeant, calibrating guns being fired on enemy infantry.
18.Even adults have a hard time calibrating the relative safety of any trip into public.
19.Finally the dynamic calibration test is set up. Calibrating frequency range and precision are analyzed deeply.
最后建立了压力传感器的激波管校准实验系统, 并对校准频率范围和校准精度进行了深入分析.
20.The idea behind the Letters of Note project—that correspondence holds a rare communicative and aesthetic power—also happens to be well calibrated for the Internet.