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词汇 nearshore
释义

Definition of nearshore in English:

nearshore

adjective ˈnɪəʃɔːˈnɪrˌʃɔr
  • 1Relating to or denoting the region of the sea or seabed relatively close to a shore.

    近岸水域的

    volunteers monitor humpback whales in nearshore waters
    corals are essential to the nearshore ecosystem
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Previous studies have shown that loons forage within aquatic habitats and nearshore marine waters of the Beaufort Sea.
    • These rotations further suggest that forces acting on the nearshore edges of large floes behave differently from those acting on offshore edges.
    • The Kelvin wave, the dominant component of the internal wave field, was responsible for alongshore velocities in the nearshore regions.
    • Bottom dwellers in the nearshore region of lakes and in rivers, gobies prefer rocky habitat that provides lots of hiding opportunities.
    • Weak downwelling conditions were prevalent for the next several days, and the Columbia River plume returned to the coast where it mixed with the chlorophyll-enriched waters in the nearshore before entering the estuary.
    • This site has yielded a relatively well-preserved and diverse nearshore marine vertebrate fauna consisting of sharks, rays, bony fishes, reptiles, and whales.
    • A tide pool discovery station provides a close-up look at nearshore marine life.
    • It occurs when a sand bar (or nearshore reef) acts as a barrier, over which waves break.
    • Perturbations in the present system, however, did not persist beyond the end of the El Niño event as they often do in lower-latitude nearshore areas.
    • During the Antarctic spring (October-December) adults congregate in nearshore colonies, where females give birth to a single pup and males vie for underwater mating territories.
    • When bivalves diversified in the Middle to Upper Ordovician, both classes occupied a full range of environments, from nearshore to basinal.
    • They feed on nearshore sea grass and algae pastures.
    • The fauna is entirely soft-bodied and was probably adapted to relatively low oxygen conditions in a variety of usually nearshore marine environments.
    • Speciation occurred in areas that became widely separated, perhaps driven by the geographic complexity of nearshore basins and submarine platforms.
    • Tegner's main scientific research focused on the ecology of kelp forest communities and nearshore marine resources.
    • Guillemots often forage solitarily, or in small groups, and they primarily select nearshore demersal fishes (sculpins, blennies, stichaeids, and pholidids) for their chicks.
    • They are nearshore only where the continental shelf is narrow.
    • The nearshore habitat of this region is characterized by numerous bays and passages with shallow shelf habitat
    • This drives the nearshore surface water down and away from the coast.
    • Modern, skeleton-breaking predators, particularly teleosts, neoselachian sharks and rays, and decapod crustaceans, began to diversify in nearshore environments during the Jurassic Period.
  • 2Relating to the transfer of a business operation to a nearby country.

    nearshore IT services
    we set up a nearshore operation in Poland
    Example sentencesExamples
    • The group of companies has offered services that have enabled more than two hundred firms to reap the benefits of nearshore manufacturing in Mexico.
    • The company is an integrator of advanced software solutions, with experience in implementing nearshore IT projects.
    • They are providing top options for nearshore development outsourcing.
    • But practical experience fosters pragmatism and adaptation and there are many agile teams working with offshore and nearshore suppliers.
    • The global delivery options would include both nearshore and offshore activities and by 2005, India would be in the driver's seat.
    • By taking on these responsibilities on behalf of the client, the job of the project manager becomes critical in ensuring the success of a nearshore development project.
    • For large enterprise settings, the ebook 'How to organize offshore and nearshore collaboration' contains a valuable chapter.
    • As US high-tech firms lost jobs to offshore companies in Asia, some Canadian firms offered themselves as nearshore alternatives.
    • The books are intended for people who are about to setup an offshore or nearshore team.
    • The nearshore contact call center company, announced the addition of a new Vice President of Business Development.
verbˈnɪəʃɔːˈnɪrˌʃɔr
[with object]
  • (of a company) transfer (a business operation) to a nearby country, especially in preference to a more distant location.

    many capital market firms are starting to nearshore their operations
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Are US-based nearshored outsourcing centers cost competitive with India?
    • 58% of respondents said that for production that has either already been nearshored or is being considered for nearshoring, they have reduced their total "landed cost" by up to 20%.
    • That manufacturers are not only nearshoring their own operations, but also their subcontractors and vendors as well.
    • The major reason that companies decide to nearshore their software development and the rest of their IT work is cost reduction.
    • The firm nearshored its digital development to engage customers online.
    • Dr Andrijasevic led the research into conditions at three nearshored factories in Turkey and the Czech Republic run by a Taiwanese electronics maker.
    • Some companies have rethought their sourcing strategies and have nearshored the production of some products and services back to a market closer to the firm's home operations.
    • Despite the common misperception that all outsourced work is being shifted to Asia, a third of outsourced Massachusetts jobs are being nearshored to Mexico.

Definition of nearshore in US English:

nearshore

adjectiveˈnɪrˌʃɔrˈnirˌSHôr
  • 1Relating to or denoting the region of the sea or seabed relatively close to a shore.

    近岸水域的

    volunteers monitor humpback whales in nearshore waters
    corals are essential to the nearshore ecosystem
    Example sentencesExamples
    • They are nearshore only where the continental shelf is narrow.
    • During the Antarctic spring (October-December) adults congregate in nearshore colonies, where females give birth to a single pup and males vie for underwater mating territories.
    • The Kelvin wave, the dominant component of the internal wave field, was responsible for alongshore velocities in the nearshore regions.
    • This drives the nearshore surface water down and away from the coast.
    • Guillemots often forage solitarily, or in small groups, and they primarily select nearshore demersal fishes (sculpins, blennies, stichaeids, and pholidids) for their chicks.
    • A tide pool discovery station provides a close-up look at nearshore marine life.
    • It occurs when a sand bar (or nearshore reef) acts as a barrier, over which waves break.
    • This site has yielded a relatively well-preserved and diverse nearshore marine vertebrate fauna consisting of sharks, rays, bony fishes, reptiles, and whales.
    • They feed on nearshore sea grass and algae pastures.
    • Tegner's main scientific research focused on the ecology of kelp forest communities and nearshore marine resources.
    • Modern, skeleton-breaking predators, particularly teleosts, neoselachian sharks and rays, and decapod crustaceans, began to diversify in nearshore environments during the Jurassic Period.
    • Previous studies have shown that loons forage within aquatic habitats and nearshore marine waters of the Beaufort Sea.
    • Perturbations in the present system, however, did not persist beyond the end of the El Niño event as they often do in lower-latitude nearshore areas.
    • When bivalves diversified in the Middle to Upper Ordovician, both classes occupied a full range of environments, from nearshore to basinal.
    • Speciation occurred in areas that became widely separated, perhaps driven by the geographic complexity of nearshore basins and submarine platforms.
    • The nearshore habitat of this region is characterized by numerous bays and passages with shallow shelf habitat
    • These rotations further suggest that forces acting on the nearshore edges of large floes behave differently from those acting on offshore edges.
    • Bottom dwellers in the nearshore region of lakes and in rivers, gobies prefer rocky habitat that provides lots of hiding opportunities.
    • Weak downwelling conditions were prevalent for the next several days, and the Columbia River plume returned to the coast where it mixed with the chlorophyll-enriched waters in the nearshore before entering the estuary.
    • The fauna is entirely soft-bodied and was probably adapted to relatively low oxygen conditions in a variety of usually nearshore marine environments.
  • 2Relating to the transfer of a business operation to a nearby country.

    nearshore IT services
    we set up a nearshore operation in Poland
    Example sentencesExamples
    • As US high-tech firms lost jobs to offshore companies in Asia, some Canadian firms offered themselves as nearshore alternatives.
    • The nearshore contact call center company, announced the addition of a new Vice President of Business Development.
    • But practical experience fosters pragmatism and adaptation and there are many agile teams working with offshore and nearshore suppliers.
    • The group of companies has offered services that have enabled more than two hundred firms to reap the benefits of nearshore manufacturing in Mexico.
    • By taking on these responsibilities on behalf of the client, the job of the project manager becomes critical in ensuring the success of a nearshore development project.
    • The books are intended for people who are about to setup an offshore or nearshore team.
    • The global delivery options would include both nearshore and offshore activities and by 2005, India would be in the driver's seat.
    • For large enterprise settings, the ebook 'How to organize offshore and nearshore collaboration' contains a valuable chapter.
    • They are providing top options for nearshore development outsourcing.
    • The company is an integrator of advanced software solutions, with experience in implementing nearshore IT projects.
verbˈnɪrˌʃɔrˈnirˌSHôr
[with object]
  • (of a company) transfer (a business operation) to a nearby country, especially in preference to a more distant location.

    many capital market firms are starting to nearshore their operations
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Dr Andrijasevic led the research into conditions at three nearshored factories in Turkey and the Czech Republic run by a Taiwanese electronics maker.
    • Some companies have rethought their sourcing strategies and have nearshored the production of some products and services back to a market closer to the firm's home operations.
    • The major reason that companies decide to nearshore their software development and the rest of their IT work is cost reduction.
    • Are US-based nearshored outsourcing centers cost competitive with India?
    • The firm nearshored its digital development to engage customers online.
    • That manufacturers are not only nearshoring their own operations, but also their subcontractors and vendors as well.
    • Despite the common misperception that all outsourced work is being shifted to Asia, a third of outsourced Massachusetts jobs are being nearshored to Mexico.
    • 58% of respondents said that for production that has either already been nearshored or is being considered for nearshoring, they have reduced their total "landed cost" by up to 20%.
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