释义 |
Definition of passim in English: passimadverb ˈpasɪmˈpasɪm (of allusions or references in a published work) to be found at various places throughout the text. (指出版物中的典故或引文)到处可见地;处处,到处 Example sentencesExamples - See G. Leff, Medieval Thought: St Augustine to Ockham, passim.
- My previous job was very high pressure, and this new one patently isn't (see postings passim!) so my levels have fallen, and that's where the throat became infected. This may not be medically sound, so if you know then please put a comment in.
- I fear a dirty little wrongful dismissal suit brought against the boondogglous Council for Canadian Unity (Franks passim, ad absurdam) may be yet another sign of a severe downturn in the patriotism business.
- Among them, the editors have collected into a mini-anthology Wilson's passim remarks on art (some very marginal) from several of his pioneering books, and Cooke has written a commentary upon them.
- When Intel set up the IA - 64 project down there in Satan Clara, it sparked off quite an internal fight at the chip firm, as we reported at the time, passim.
- As reported in Franks passim, the Dullard show is like a wounded albatross trying to get off the ground.
- I tell you, there was more head on the first attempt to pour me a pint in The Punch and Judy on Tuesday than there was in Caligula passim.
- Buell discusses these matters passim, particularly in his two best chapters, one on Self-Reliance and another on Religious Radicalisms.
- For counterpoint, see Society of the Spectacle sec. 158, though also passim.
- I was of course making a keynote speech at the recent meeting of the Louth Heritage Plan Public Consultation, mentioned here in columns passim.
- See Pitkin 285-306 passim for a detailed investigation of the ways in which Machiavelli's cultural misogyny undercuts other aspects of his argument.
- More on this here, passim, especially the section about Zarathustra and the three inamorati (Life, Wisdom, and Eternity).
- At 58, Fontaine shows little sign of slowing down on his amorous adventures, as intermittently recorded in Franks passim.
- See Wittgenstein Philosophical Investigations, 2: 221-9 and passim, especially his comments on mathematics.
- This doctrine may be said to be found passim in nearly every case.
OriginLatin, from passus 'scattered', from the verb pandere. Definition of passim in US English: passimadverbˈpasɪm (of allusions or references in a published work) to be found at various places throughout the text. (指出版物中的典故或引文)到处可见地;处处,到处 Example sentencesExamples - I was of course making a keynote speech at the recent meeting of the Louth Heritage Plan Public Consultation, mentioned here in columns passim.
- I tell you, there was more head on the first attempt to pour me a pint in The Punch and Judy on Tuesday than there was in Caligula passim.
- Buell discusses these matters passim, particularly in his two best chapters, one on Self-Reliance and another on Religious Radicalisms.
- I fear a dirty little wrongful dismissal suit brought against the boondogglous Council for Canadian Unity (Franks passim, ad absurdam) may be yet another sign of a severe downturn in the patriotism business.
- When Intel set up the IA - 64 project down there in Santa Clara, it sparked off quite an internal fight at the chip firm, as we reported at the time, passim.
- Among them, the editors have collected into a mini-anthology Wilson's passim remarks on art (some very marginal) from several of his pioneering books, and Cooke has written a commentary upon them.
- For counterpoint, see Society of the Spectacle sec. 158, though also passim.
- My previous job was very high pressure, and this new one patently isn't (see postings passim!) so my levels have fallen, and that's where the throat became infected. This may not be medically sound, so if you know then please put a comment in.
- As reported in Franks passim, the Dullard show is like a wounded albatross trying to get off the ground.
- See Pitkin 285-306 passim for a detailed investigation of the ways in which Machiavelli's cultural misogyny undercuts other aspects of his argument.
- See Wittgenstein Philosophical Investigations, 2: 221-9 and passim, especially his comments on mathematics.
- More on this here, passim, especially the section about Zarathustra and the three inamorati (Life, Wisdom, and Eternity).
- At 58, Fontaine shows little sign of slowing down on his amorous adventures, as intermittently recorded in Franks passim.
- See G. Leff, Medieval Thought: St Augustine to Ockham, passim.
- This doctrine may be said to be found passim in nearly every case.
OriginLatin, from passus ‘scattered’, from the verb pandere. |