释义 |
Definition of invariable in English: invariableadjective ɪnˈvɛːrɪəb(ə)lˌɪnˈvɛriəb(ə)l 1Never changing. 永远不变的,始终如一的,恒定的 his routine was invariable Example sentencesExamples - If we expect that human character is an elusive and variable thing, then we cannot expect to catch it in a stiff and invariable style.
- They have denied the distinction between higher and lower, to the invariable advantage of the latter.
- Side effects (from both free drug and free marine antibody protein) will be the invariable result.
- The results are invariable light, crisp and as tempting as food could possibly be, and the whole experience far less traumatic than I imagined.
- On the Central Coast, cooks season well-marbled beef with salt and garlic, sizzle it over local red-oak coals and serve it with the invariable trinity of garlic bread, stewed local pinquito beans and tomato salsa.
- With the almost invariable practice of boiling vegetables with its consequent loss of vitamins, the practice of providing fresh fruit with the meal would have much to recommend it.
- The invariable result is a loss of quality and the increasing difficulty of including foreign authors in the publishers' programmes.
- The second was the invariable denial that followed - the outright refutation of indisputable evidence, or the protestations of innocence or ignorance, or the imputation that supplements had been spiked or contaminated.
- Then he would come home, and Saturday lunch would be some kind of special event, which included, as its invariable dessert, suet pudding with golden syrup and custard.
- It isn't just an occasional failure, it's an invariable failure.
- These weren't just statistics, I was led to believe, but invariable truths.
- It's staying focussed for long periods of time and the invariable effects on posture, concentration and sense of wellbeing.
- Clade strengths were evaluated by analyzing 250 bootstrap replicates with the PROML program based on a model comprising one invariable plus four categories.
- This development was important because the rule was meant to be invariable, such that it constituted absolutely reliable support for the proving of the thesis proposition.
- The invariable response, when you tell a child that the celebrities have been submerged in mud and entombed with rats, is ‘Why?’
- These details are not mentioned by the Gospels, but are an invariable feature of every icon of the Nativity.
- The invariable result is always supposed to be mass unemployment, industry collapse, and economic meltdown - until someone points out reality.
- One of the hard, invariable, and maddening unofficial rules of parenting, is that you pay for what you get.
- How did their fossil remains get sorted into an invariable order in the earth's strata?
- Working on that invariable response, and the number of cricket fans in the country, there must have been three to four million spectators there that amazing day.
Synonyms unvarying, unchanging, changeless, unvaried, invariant constant, stable, set, steady, fast, static, uniform, predictable, regular, consistent, undeviating, unfluctuating, unwavering unchangeable, unalterable, immutable, fixed - 1.1Grammar (of a noun in an inflected language) having the same form in both the singular and the plural, as does relais in French.
(屈折变化语言的名词)单复数同形的(如法语中 relais ) Example sentencesExamples - It consists, just as Esperanto, of completely invariable blocks that combine without restriction.
- 1.2Mathematics (of a quantity) constant.
〔数〕(数量) 不变的 Example sentencesExamples - The fundamental constants are an extensive set of invariable quantities, such as the charge of the electron, which scientists use to predict a very wide range of phenomena.
- Thus, the flux of water vapour at a constant concentration gradient across pores of invariable geometry will depend only on the molecular characteristics of the gas (solvent).
- The null hypothesis tested in this study, then, was the proportion of invariable sites model plus either site-specific or gamma-distributed rate variation.
OriginLate Middle English: from French, or from late Latin invariabilis, from in- 'not' + variabilis (see variable). Definition of invariable in US English: invariableadjectiveˌɪnˈvɛriəb(ə)lˌinˈverēəb(ə)l 1Never changing. 永远不变的,始终如一的,恒定的 disillusion was the almost invariable result 幻想破灭是几乎固定不变的结局。 Example sentencesExamples - This development was important because the rule was meant to be invariable, such that it constituted absolutely reliable support for the proving of the thesis proposition.
- The invariable result is a loss of quality and the increasing difficulty of including foreign authors in the publishers' programmes.
- Then he would come home, and Saturday lunch would be some kind of special event, which included, as its invariable dessert, suet pudding with golden syrup and custard.
- With the almost invariable practice of boiling vegetables with its consequent loss of vitamins, the practice of providing fresh fruit with the meal would have much to recommend it.
- The results are invariable light, crisp and as tempting as food could possibly be, and the whole experience far less traumatic than I imagined.
- These weren't just statistics, I was led to believe, but invariable truths.
- The invariable response, when you tell a child that the celebrities have been submerged in mud and entombed with rats, is ‘Why?’
- The invariable result is always supposed to be mass unemployment, industry collapse, and economic meltdown - until someone points out reality.
- Working on that invariable response, and the number of cricket fans in the country, there must have been three to four million spectators there that amazing day.
- They have denied the distinction between higher and lower, to the invariable advantage of the latter.
- Side effects (from both free drug and free marine antibody protein) will be the invariable result.
- These details are not mentioned by the Gospels, but are an invariable feature of every icon of the Nativity.
- On the Central Coast, cooks season well-marbled beef with salt and garlic, sizzle it over local red-oak coals and serve it with the invariable trinity of garlic bread, stewed local pinquito beans and tomato salsa.
- If we expect that human character is an elusive and variable thing, then we cannot expect to catch it in a stiff and invariable style.
- How did their fossil remains get sorted into an invariable order in the earth's strata?
- The second was the invariable denial that followed - the outright refutation of indisputable evidence, or the protestations of innocence or ignorance, or the imputation that supplements had been spiked or contaminated.
- Clade strengths were evaluated by analyzing 250 bootstrap replicates with the PROML program based on a model comprising one invariable plus four categories.
- It isn't just an occasional failure, it's an invariable failure.
- It's staying focussed for long periods of time and the invariable effects on posture, concentration and sense of wellbeing.
- One of the hard, invariable, and maddening unofficial rules of parenting, is that you pay for what you get.
Synonyms unvarying, unchanging, changeless, unvaried, invariant - 1.1Grammar (of a noun in an inflected language) having the same form in both the singular and the plural, e.g., sheep.
(屈折变化语言的名词)单复数同形的(如法语中 relais ) Example sentencesExamples - It consists, just as Esperanto, of completely invariable blocks that combine without restriction.
- 1.2Mathematics (of a quantity) constant.
〔数〕(数量) 不变的 Example sentencesExamples - The null hypothesis tested in this study, then, was the proportion of invariable sites model plus either site-specific or gamma-distributed rate variation.
- The fundamental constants are an extensive set of invariable quantities, such as the charge of the electron, which scientists use to predict a very wide range of phenomena.
- Thus, the flux of water vapour at a constant concentration gradient across pores of invariable geometry will depend only on the molecular characteristics of the gas (solvent).
OriginLate Middle English: from French, or from late Latin invariabilis, from in- ‘not’ + variabilis (see variable). |