1.Calibrated to a hair.
极其精确的校准
英:['kælɪbreɪtɪd]
美:['kælɪbreɪtɪd]
v.
校准( calibrate的过去式和过去分词 )
使标准化
使合标准
测量(枪的)口径
词根:calibrate
n.calibration 校准;刻度;标度
vt.calibrate 校正;调整;测定口径
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
trued
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
1.Calibrated to a hair.
极其精确的校准
2.The workshops were concerned with honing the finely calibrated arguments in which Nora engages with each member of the household.
3.Best of all are the fountains, which have been calibrated to add their own luminous design to the piece, sometimes shooting high and ecstatic between the dancers, sometimes bubbling gently near the ground.
4.Tap the Code button to create one-time and custom PIN codes, and tap the Functions button to adjust the speaker level, calibrate the lock, and configure auto lock times (between 5 seconds and 60 seconds).
5.Throughout the course of the interviews, Hitchcock makes clear that his moviemaking was always calibrated to arouse a specific emotion, a specific reaction on the part of viewers, and he approached these interviews no differently.
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.Mr. Jesurun treats his actors like found objects, setting their vocal qualities and idiosyncratic deliveries against his language and allowing for a certain live mayhem to destabilize the finely calibrated text.
8.Robert Duvall won his Oscar for his finely calibrated portrayal of a recovering alcoholic country singer in “Tender Mercies,” and much of his best work is in service to nuanced roles.
9.It’s an argument prosecuted in a perfectly calibrated procession of fast and slow arias, of joy, anger and sadness.
10.The difficulty of the competition, which is automatically calibrated by the software so that the puzzle becomes harder the more users join in, virtually ensures that no single user can monopolize the network.
11.A perfectly calibrated power ballad, with the Lady Gaga chorus trademark of repeated syllables, does movie-musical triple duty as love song, vocal showcase and plot pivot.
12.At the news conference for “The Idol,” Levinson was asked how he calibrated the sex scenes and near-constant nudity without going too far.
13.It needs to be calibrated for each person, and works for those with or without glasses.
但是这还需要按照每个人进行校准,并且用户还不能佩戴眼镜。
14.It’s imitation Reich, inferior in invention and less precisely calibrated in duration.
15.Teengirl Fantasy encoded mixed emotions into its electronic music, a calibrated mesh of brooding minor chords and perky, quickly mutating beats.
16.Other major Western allies are also calibrating their own longer-term plans for Ukraine with an eye to November’s U.S. election.
17.This year’s answer was to feature an African American delivering sharp commentary that was calibrated to singe rather than burn.
18.But fashion — which is to say runway-ready garments with some level of carefully calibrated aesthetic ambition — didn’t provide any of them.
19.His first season is carefully calibrated to suggest it should not have to be an either/or proposition.
20.I have calibrated the amount of the latter ingredient so that it highlights the floral notes of pistachios, instead of turning the cookie into a heavily perfumed confection.