释义 |
Definition of interrelationship in English: interrelationshipnounɪntərɪˈleɪʃ(ə)nʃɪpˌɪn(t)ərəˈleɪʃ(ə)nˌʃɪp The way in which each of two or more things is related to the other or others. 相互关系,相互联系,相互影响 the interrelationship between the comprehension and production of early vocabulary 早期词汇理解和运用之间的相互关系。 Example sentencesExamples - The common procedure for this is to apply statistical methods on consumption and production data in order to establish their interrelationship.
- Surely she does think about such networks and interrelationships.
- A key concern of a number of recent U.S. studies has been the interrelationship between relations of politics, power, and racism.
- The authors make the case for a middle ground, where investigators are attentive to broad patterns of interrelationships informed by causal understanding.
- A final analysis looked at interrelationships between variables and connections between themes.
- Here, in the company of spiders, monkeys, birds and newly emerged larvae, they learn of the earth, of interrelationships and about themselves.
- The interrelationship in relation to contract and tort was not explored in the appellant's case.
- Because the 13 attributes were not perceived to be mutually exclusive by study respondents, a factor analysis was run in order to clarify the interrelationships among them.
- Their collective bodies of work envision a world that does not devalue and separate people, a world connected to ideals of justice grounded in the interrelationships of words and deeds.
- As a science, ecology describes the interrelationships between organisms and environments - that is, the experience of living together in the biosphere.
- He has not given the reason - he has not given any reason relating to the interrelationship of the features as an inventive combination.
- In fact, it cries for technical attention because nobody understands the interrelationships among concurrent tests of significance.
- He said it also addresses the interrelationships of nations and cultures, and how war and other violent acts can affect the balance of nature.
- Essentially, this takes into account the various interrelationships that are involved in a product's lifecycle.
- But what the film is all about is the wooden worlds of the sea, and the complex interrelationships and miniscule hierarchies are beautifully observed.
- The reasons for the failure of the Greeks to develop a fruitful notion of laws of Nature and commence their systematic discovery are manifold, and their mutual interrelationships complicated.
- If there's a hole in this plan, it is that the parts of the whole are so intricate and so complex that their interrelationships and outcomes cannot wholly be known.
- I never learned about human interrelationships and behavior.
- The other major gender difference related to desire and pleasure concerned the interrelationships among these two themes.
- Genetic interactions uncover interrelationships between components of a cellular pathway or interactions between different cellular pathways.
Synonyms connection, association, link, tie-in, tie-up, relation, relationship, interdependence, interconnection, interaction Definition of interrelationship in US English: interrelationshipnounˌɪn(t)ərəˈleɪʃ(ə)nˌʃɪpˌin(t)ərəˈlāSH(ə)nˌSHip The way in which each of two or more things is related to the other or others. 相互关系,相互联系,相互影响 the interrelationship between the comprehension and production of early vocabulary 早期词汇理解和运用之间的相互关系。 Example sentencesExamples - The reasons for the failure of the Greeks to develop a fruitful notion of laws of Nature and commence their systematic discovery are manifold, and their mutual interrelationships complicated.
- I never learned about human interrelationships and behavior.
- If there's a hole in this plan, it is that the parts of the whole are so intricate and so complex that their interrelationships and outcomes cannot wholly be known.
- In fact, it cries for technical attention because nobody understands the interrelationships among concurrent tests of significance.
- He has not given the reason - he has not given any reason relating to the interrelationship of the features as an inventive combination.
- Because the 13 attributes were not perceived to be mutually exclusive by study respondents, a factor analysis was run in order to clarify the interrelationships among them.
- The interrelationship in relation to contract and tort was not explored in the appellant's case.
- The other major gender difference related to desire and pleasure concerned the interrelationships among these two themes.
- But what the film is all about is the wooden worlds of the sea, and the complex interrelationships and miniscule hierarchies are beautifully observed.
- A key concern of a number of recent U.S. studies has been the interrelationship between relations of politics, power, and racism.
- Their collective bodies of work envision a world that does not devalue and separate people, a world connected to ideals of justice grounded in the interrelationships of words and deeds.
- Surely she does think about such networks and interrelationships.
- As a science, ecology describes the interrelationships between organisms and environments - that is, the experience of living together in the biosphere.
- A final analysis looked at interrelationships between variables and connections between themes.
- Genetic interactions uncover interrelationships between components of a cellular pathway or interactions between different cellular pathways.
- Essentially, this takes into account the various interrelationships that are involved in a product's lifecycle.
- The common procedure for this is to apply statistical methods on consumption and production data in order to establish their interrelationship.
- Here, in the company of spiders, monkeys, birds and newly emerged larvae, they learn of the earth, of interrelationships and about themselves.
- He said it also addresses the interrelationships of nations and cultures, and how war and other violent acts can affect the balance of nature.
- The authors make the case for a middle ground, where investigators are attentive to broad patterns of interrelationships informed by causal understanding.
Synonyms connection, association, link, tie-in, tie-up, relation, relationship, interdependence, interconnection, interaction |