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termed查看 termed 在百度字典中的解释百度英翻中〔查看〕
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  • What is the difference between named and termed?
    However, termed is much more formal and is often used to describe very specific concepts in multiple different fields named, on the other hand, is a bit less formal and thus, much less restrictive than termed The general consensus seems to be: if you want to give a name to a very specific concept in a formal environment, pick termed
  • vocabulary - Difference between coin (v. ) and term (v. ) - English . . .
    (A) changed (B) coined (C) termed (D) viewed The answer key provided is (C) termed which I think that makes sense by the definition of term (verb) to give something a name or to describe it with a particular expression However, I think "coined" is also correct by the definition of coin (verb)
  • Is the word “re-term” strange? - English Language Usage Stack . . .
    There is nothing wrong with re-termed (Although, as was mentioned in some comments, it might be better to say renamed instead ) However, what struck me as odd about the sentence is there is no explicit mention of the metric being named anything in the first place In order to re-something, it must be done at least once to start with
  • What is the term for the sections of a Subsection?
    I have been looking to write up some information about a fictional species and I understand to a point some of the legislative writing But I never understood a few terms Example: "3 2 5 4" First
  • single word requests - What is a person who smells things called . . .
    But since the sense of smell is quite commonly known to be more formally termed the olfactory sense, and the act of smelling thus also termed olfaction, I would suggest that a better formal and stylised term for someone who smells would be an olfactor This word does indeed exist; Wiktionary defines it as: A smelling organ; a nose
  • terminology - Why is uploading termed uploading and downloading . . .
    What is "up" or "down" about it? I mean, geographically it makes no sense I can upload images, and download images - the former is away from my computer and the later is coming to it but why "up"
  • Why is guinea pig used as the colloquial term for test subjects?
    Guinea pigs might not be the most common experimental subjects today, but we have to look at how common they were when the term was first coined, which was many decades ago, as Etymonline points out:
  • What is the origin of a racket, meaning a scam or swindle?
    In fact, any game may be termed a rig, racket, suit, slum, c by prefixing thereto the particular branch of depredation or fraud in question, many examples of which occur in this work So the noun racket in its underworld sense has been around since the early 1800s (at least) and appears to have been inspired by the use of sudden noises by
  • etymology - Which was the first doctor, M. D. or Ph. D. ? - English . . .
    For which title was the term "doctor" first given? Was it originally meant for the medical doctor, or for just anyone holding a doctoral degree? Also: When did the later usage become common, and
  • etymology - What is the origin of the term ‘blue movie’? - English . . .
    Conclusions Treating all of G L Morrill's forays into the cinema of Marseilles as a single episode, we still have three instances in U S English of "blue movie" in the broad sense of "pornographic film" linked to Marseilles, from 1922 to 1931, with no relevant instances from anywhere else





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