释义 |
Definition of unilinear in US English: unilinearadjectiveˌyo͞onəˈlinēərˌyo͞onəˈlinēər 1Developing or arranged serially and predictably, without deviation. there is a unilinear path of language learning with a finite end Example sentencesExamples - A unilinear view of modernity, with Shitao's gestural brushwork as a sort of unconscious precursor to Abstract Expressionism, is here surely laid to rest forever.
- And language ideology is not necessarily a unilinear force that binds speakers of a language together.
- In sociological terms, her case suggests a positive and unilinear relationship between the negative tenor of existence on earth and the degree of transcendent otherness ascribed to God.
- It presumes a rigid adherence to a unilinear model and rigid assumption of the necessity for reinforcement of every behavior (cf. ‘partial reinforcement’).
- We also must wonder that if unilinear progress in the mode of production can instead have phases of retrogression is there a possibility of World War III?
- This process of unilinear ranking consists of extrapolating data from various statistical protocols and then arranging them in an ascending order.
- He was unsettled by the relativism that discarded the notion of unilinear, directional time and placed Indigenous perspectives on equal terms with Western ones.
- The description given is closer in accord with procedures used than the present unilinear description.
- There is no unilinear relationship between the spheres of activity and the point of departure to explain the historical process may equally be that of forms of state or world order.
- I shall critically evaluate the orthodox and revisionist analyses in terms of the ten dimensions on which I compared them, suggesting a more complex picture than the unilinear development of policing implied by both approaches.
- So there was no unilinear abandonment of the old habits: in America, slavery still involved whipping and branding (at least until the 1830s), and the penal systems of the northeast found it hard to give up corporal punishment.
- Gill suggests that ‘globalization is dialectical, not unilinear, promoting opposing tendencies: integration and fragmentation, universalism and particularism, homogenisation and differentiation’.
- Development is not imagined as a unilinear process, involving a move from undeveloped to developed.
- To sum it up, Bose has invested rational intellect and humanist thought into this venture, but at numerous junctures headed off on unilinear paths motivated by sheer subjectivity.
- Yet, the confusion may well be an accurate reflection of the fact that the development she traces from the producerist worldview of 1870 to the consumer-oriented consensus that had emerged by mid-century was not unilinear.
- It would appear that the unilinear and causative thought model by which he interprets the theology of the Lord's Prayer does not capture the co-presence of different perspectives within the same text.
- I believe that many of the problems encountered in examining behavior may be related to our attempts to fit alternative procedures into unilinear statements.
- As is the case in many such texts, the historical treatment is unilinear, moving from Greeks and Romans to medieval and then post-medieval Europe and so on up to the present.
- More than some unilinear stage in the evolution of society, ‘information society’ indexes the distance between where people believe organizations are and where they should be: it is, in other words, a function of the imaginary.
- The trend is unilinear, towards more centralization in Number 10.
- 1.1 (of websites) allowing or designed for controlled navigation, following a single path.
Derivativesadverb The scientific ideal is essential from my standpoint, but philosophy does not progress unilinearly; we keep returning to founding texts over and over. Example sentencesExamples - Arguing that technology investment is not unilinearly increased but introduced only as a strategy of re-structuration by capital through the class composition theory, he criticizes the technological determinism of the theories of labor extinction.
- The study by Seielstad, Minch, and Cavalli-Sforza may be regarded as the pioneer study on the relations between genetic variation of unilinearly transmitted polymorphisms and sociocultural factors.
- At any rate, of course, my thinking is skewed to perceive things unilinearly as long as I continue to subject myself to the doctrine of schools…
- When the bacterial cell divides, only one daughter cell in each generation contains the exogenote which is transmitted unilinearly.
Definition of unilinear in US English: unilinearadjectiveˌyo͞onəˈlinēər 1Developing or arranged serially and predictably, without deviation. there is a unilinear path of language learning with a finite end Example sentencesExamples - It presumes a rigid adherence to a unilinear model and rigid assumption of the necessity for reinforcement of every behavior (cf. ‘partial reinforcement’).
- He was unsettled by the relativism that discarded the notion of unilinear, directional time and placed Indigenous perspectives on equal terms with Western ones.
- In sociological terms, her case suggests a positive and unilinear relationship between the negative tenor of existence on earth and the degree of transcendent otherness ascribed to God.
- As is the case in many such texts, the historical treatment is unilinear, moving from Greeks and Romans to medieval and then post-medieval Europe and so on up to the present.
- A unilinear view of modernity, with Shitao's gestural brushwork as a sort of unconscious precursor to Abstract Expressionism, is here surely laid to rest forever.
- So there was no unilinear abandonment of the old habits: in America, slavery still involved whipping and branding (at least until the 1830s), and the penal systems of the northeast found it hard to give up corporal punishment.
- It would appear that the unilinear and causative thought model by which he interprets the theology of the Lord's Prayer does not capture the co-presence of different perspectives within the same text.
- There is no unilinear relationship between the spheres of activity and the point of departure to explain the historical process may equally be that of forms of state or world order.
- Gill suggests that ‘globalization is dialectical, not unilinear, promoting opposing tendencies: integration and fragmentation, universalism and particularism, homogenisation and differentiation’.
- We also must wonder that if unilinear progress in the mode of production can instead have phases of retrogression is there a possibility of World War III?
- More than some unilinear stage in the evolution of society, ‘information society’ indexes the distance between where people believe organizations are and where they should be: it is, in other words, a function of the imaginary.
- The description given is closer in accord with procedures used than the present unilinear description.
- And language ideology is not necessarily a unilinear force that binds speakers of a language together.
- Yet, the confusion may well be an accurate reflection of the fact that the development she traces from the producerist worldview of 1870 to the consumer-oriented consensus that had emerged by mid-century was not unilinear.
- The trend is unilinear, towards more centralization in Number 10.
- I shall critically evaluate the orthodox and revisionist analyses in terms of the ten dimensions on which I compared them, suggesting a more complex picture than the unilinear development of policing implied by both approaches.
- This process of unilinear ranking consists of extrapolating data from various statistical protocols and then arranging them in an ascending order.
- I believe that many of the problems encountered in examining behavior may be related to our attempts to fit alternative procedures into unilinear statements.
- To sum it up, Bose has invested rational intellect and humanist thought into this venture, but at numerous junctures headed off on unilinear paths motivated by sheer subjectivity.
- Development is not imagined as a unilinear process, involving a move from undeveloped to developed.
- 1.1 (of websites) allowing or designed for controlled navigation, following a single path.
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