Equivalents
[ɪk'wɪvələnts]
例句/造句/用法:
- These Jacobins were the equivalents of the American radicals, men with untrammelled advanced ideas. 赫伯特·喬治·威爾斯. 世界史綱.
- The British Ministry of Reconstruction and its foreign equivalents were exposed as a soothing sham. 赫伯特·喬治·威爾斯. 世界史綱.
- It is impossible that it should have any success in these tasks without educational equivalents as to what to do and what not to do. 約翰·杜威. 民主與教育.
- The use of electrical current in twelve principal cities in the United States was distributed in 1898 as follows: Lamps, arcs, and motors in sixteen candle power equivalents. Edward W. Byrn. 十九世紀發明進展.
- The Semitic peoples, we may point out here, are to this day _counting peoples_ strong in their sense of equivalents and reparation. 赫伯特·喬治·威爾斯. 世界史綱.
- Educational Equivalents. 約翰·杜威. 民主與教育.
- The educational equivalents of this doctrine in the uses made of pleasurable rewards and painful penalties are only too obvious. 約翰·杜威. 民主與教育.
- This is an obvious truism, which however gains meaning when translated into educational equivalents. 約翰·杜威. 民主與教育.
- As a very natural consequence of such development, the company by 1902 had 420 miles of underground system supplying installation amounting to 1,928,090 fifty-watt equivalents. 佚名. 神奇的知識之書.
- To serve the people means to provide it with services--with clean streets and water, with education, with opportunity, with beneficent channels for its desires, with moral equivalents for evil. 沃爾特·李普曼. 政治序論.
- A greater number of new equivalents, of some kind or other, must have been presented to them to be exchanged for the surplus produce of that industry. 亞當·斯密. 國富論.
校對:伍德罗