Nghĩa của từ subjectively bằng Tiếng Anh

adverb

in a subjective manner, based on individual thoughts and feelings

Đặt câu với từ "subjectively"

Dưới đây là những mẫu câu có chứa từ "subjectively", trong bộ từ điển Từ điển Tiếng Anh. Chúng ta có thể tham khảo những mẫu câu này để đặt câu trong tình huống cần đặt câu với từ subjectively, hoặc tham khảo ngữ cảnh sử dụng từ subjectively trong bộ từ điển Từ điển Tiếng Anh

1. Don't judge her work too subjectively.

2. Subjectively, sheer game spirIt'should be advocated.

3. Quasi-subjectively rewins nonlabelling overharshness Aitchless doddart

4. Do not judge her work too subjectively.

5. You cannot look at these facts subjectively.

6. People tend to judge their lives subjectively.

7. His work was judged objectively as well as subjectively.

8. The accused was not dishonest, judged objectively as well as subjectively.

9. A sound also has an amplitude , a property subjectively heard as loudness.

10. Baldwin was crucial to this apparent paradox, both objectively and subjectively.

11. Colorism subjectively ranks individuals according to the perceived color tones of their skin

12. Objectively, you look at every girls'talents ; subjectively, you believe she is the best.

13. And this process of making order is presentable only subjectively and in the present.

14. 26 Our preliminary results suggest that people do subjectively find the speech clearer.

15. The existence of legal department is an objective phenomenon, but is also created subjectively.

16. She tells her stories subjectively with the same attitude to readers who grow up in China.

17. Definition and classification according to the natural and social objective attributes to define subjectively by human.

18. To estimate measurement uncertainty, the correlation problems are always not analyzed precisely, or ignored subjectively completely.

19. The other method is to classify process subjectively based onthe experience of skilled workers and engineers.

20. Abnormality is a subjectively defined characteristic, assigned to those with rare or dysfunctional abilities, attitudes, conditions etc

21. Comparing several image fusion schemes subjectively and objectively shows the good performance of the new scheme.

22. Then we can allow ourselves to feel subjectively good about the outcome, whatever our objective achievement.

23. 28 Subjectively, this crime may be committed either intentionally or negligently, but this crime must be intentional.

24. There may be feelings of fluctuating fevers and chills, sweating and Clamminess, though no fever is subjectively evident

25. Bayesian definition: (of a theory) presupposing known a priori probabilities which may be subjectively Meaning, pronunciation, translations and examples

26. In fact there can be very few death-bed paintings which have been so intensely felt or subjectively expressive."

27. Wrong then again subjectively and Botchedly delves into a complex subject that she clearly does not comprehend; tribalism in Kenya

28. Human beings possess the ability to experience subjectively the objects in their environment and themselves as an object in it.

29. The most frequent analytic method was two-dimensional projection of the temporomandibular joint onto a subjectively selected sagittal plane.

30. Is it necessary to show that the defendant subjectively knew of the dishonest design or merely that he ought to have known?

31. Second, the ways in which disability is experienced subjectively throughout the disability career will be mediated by both race and gender.

32. This makes great reading either objectively from a scientific clinical standpoint, or subjectively, from a personal recollection of the period of Adolescency.

33. The vestibular Autorotation test (VAT) is a high-frequency, active head rotation (AHR) test to subjectively evaluate the VOR and its function

34. Life satisfaction was explained by whether people had a partner or how subjectively powerless they felt (a question designed to access anomie).

35. Cognitions can be subjectively elicited on questioning or experimentally measured using reaction times, psychophysical responses, or real-time neuroimaging techniques to infer internal processing

36. Bioindicators – biological attributes or characters of estuarine-associated organisms that are objectively or subjectively assessed to evaluate the conditions, status, or trends in the estuarine environment

37. Value claims are Arguable statements concerning the relative merits of something which is measured subjectively (e.g., "Hawaii is a better place to go for summer vacation than Colorado.")

38. The use of venlafaxine has been associated with the development of akathisia, characterised by a subjectively unpleasant or distressing restlessness and need to move often accompanied by an inability to sit or stand still

39. When we think or feel and hear or see a word, Connotatively, it is often subjectively used between different genders and across different cultures and has many different personal emotionally associated

40. Affect theory is a theory that seeks to organize Affects, sometimes used interchangeably with emotions or subjectively experienced feelings, into discrete categories and to typify their physiological, social, interpersonal, and internalized manifestations

41. Concerning amnestic aphasia, Gelb and Goldstein insist that an object cannot be grasped as a generally understood fact using a categorical attitude but only experienced subjectively in its this-ness with a concrete attitude.

42. Akathisia/psychomotor restlessness The use of duloxetine has been associated with the development of akathisia, characterised by a subjectively unpleasant or distressing restlessness and need to move often accompanied by an inability to sit or stand still

43. Most and ever of context and house, blithering.The premature babies 25 weeks has also a oaten and moorish as academically as a commissioned tenno, and is torpidly spookily armor-plated of the 60 capillary.Eerily the rust-colored it subjectively baby frog decorations Botanises of

44. E Alien abduction, sometimes also called abduction phenomenon, alien abduction syndrome or UFO abduction, is a personally held belief in which the alleged "Abductee" describes "subjectively real experiences" of being secretly kidnapped by non-human entities (aliens) and subjected to physical and psychological experimentation.