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词汇 unobservable
释义

Definition of unobservable in English:

unobservable

adjective ʌnəbˈzəːvəb(ə)lˌənəbˈzərvəbəl
  • Not able to be observed.

    无法观察的;难以察觉的

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Most of the damage caused to the crops occurs during the underground, unobservable parasitism stage.
    • There is, of course, the question of unobservable costs - and read Ambassador Peter Galbraith's disturbing account in the Boston Globe on that issue.
    • As in the analysis of the sample, they use a statistical model in which the intention of the voters - an unobservable variable - is measured, with some error, by different events.
    • If nothing else, Wringe v Cohen shifts the burden of proof from the claimant to the defendant, since it is the occupier who must establish that the nuisance was caused by a trespasser or a secret unobservable process of nature.
    • I could understand such a view in a religious believer - as religious believers believe in lots of mysterious, mystical and unobservable stuff - but Keith is an atheist!
    • Similarly, a firm may value worker characteristics that are unobservable to employment agencies but quite observable to family and friends.
    • Controlling for all of these observable differences through matching or multivariate methods may well be possible, but considerable unobservable heterogeneity that would be difficult to control for would probably remain.
    • However, we can sometimes infer some of the particle's unobservable properties from what we can observe.
    • I choose to hold the belief that every act of magic has some effect, even if it is so miniscule (or cosmic, or seemingly unrelated) as to be unobservable.
    • In the writings of the logical empiricists this view was closely allied to a sceptical attitude concerning the ontological status of the unobservable things postulated by scientific theories.
    • But because structural changes to the true genealogy are generally unobservable, these studies all assume that observed variation is neutral, whereas the variation on which selection acts is unseen.
    • It involved appeal to the flow of energy governed by thermodynamics and differential equations - all concepts possessing unobservable aspects - and made full use of a manifold of mental pictures.
    • In quantum field theories, the actual field values are one of these unobservable things; what we can actually see is discrete excitations of the fields that we call ‘particles.’
    • But if ‘unobservable’ is thus interpreted, it seems to be true that material objects are unobservable, and the recognition of this truth could hardly be regarded as a matter for reproach.
    • Electrical chemical instruments allow for the naturally unobservable, such as molecules, to be observed.
    • Does the same evolutionary predilection lead physicists and mathematicians to see beauty in the unobserved, or unobservable?
    • I tend to think that statements like ‘there is an unobservable pink fairy on my shoulder’ are meaningless.
    • During October, Mercury remains close to the Sun and so is unobservable until its return to the evening sky later in November.
    • National portraits typically underestimate change as well as variation, and their explanatory schemas commonly invoke unobservable traditions more than socio-economic institutions.
    • The behaviorist, like the molecular biologist or astrophysicist, assumes that, for the most part, unobservable events obey the same laws as the observable ones they can study.

Definition of unobservable in US English:

unobservable

adjectiveˌənəbˈzərvəbəlˌənəbˈzərvəbəl
  • Not able to be observed.

    无法观察的;难以察觉的

    Example sentencesExamples
    • It involved appeal to the flow of energy governed by thermodynamics and differential equations - all concepts possessing unobservable aspects - and made full use of a manifold of mental pictures.
    • There is, of course, the question of unobservable costs - and read Ambassador Peter Galbraith's disturbing account in the Boston Globe on that issue.
    • As in the analysis of the sample, they use a statistical model in which the intention of the voters - an unobservable variable - is measured, with some error, by different events.
    • I could understand such a view in a religious believer - as religious believers believe in lots of mysterious, mystical and unobservable stuff - but Keith is an atheist!
    • Does the same evolutionary predilection lead physicists and mathematicians to see beauty in the unobserved, or unobservable?
    • But because structural changes to the true genealogy are generally unobservable, these studies all assume that observed variation is neutral, whereas the variation on which selection acts is unseen.
    • But if ‘unobservable’ is thus interpreted, it seems to be true that material objects are unobservable, and the recognition of this truth could hardly be regarded as a matter for reproach.
    • I choose to hold the belief that every act of magic has some effect, even if it is so miniscule (or cosmic, or seemingly unrelated) as to be unobservable.
    • During October, Mercury remains close to the Sun and so is unobservable until its return to the evening sky later in November.
    • If nothing else, Wringe v Cohen shifts the burden of proof from the claimant to the defendant, since it is the occupier who must establish that the nuisance was caused by a trespasser or a secret unobservable process of nature.
    • Similarly, a firm may value worker characteristics that are unobservable to employment agencies but quite observable to family and friends.
    • The behaviorist, like the molecular biologist or astrophysicist, assumes that, for the most part, unobservable events obey the same laws as the observable ones they can study.
    • In quantum field theories, the actual field values are one of these unobservable things; what we can actually see is discrete excitations of the fields that we call ‘particles.’
    • Controlling for all of these observable differences through matching or multivariate methods may well be possible, but considerable unobservable heterogeneity that would be difficult to control for would probably remain.
    • In the writings of the logical empiricists this view was closely allied to a sceptical attitude concerning the ontological status of the unobservable things postulated by scientific theories.
    • Most of the damage caused to the crops occurs during the underground, unobservable parasitism stage.
    • Electrical chemical instruments allow for the naturally unobservable, such as molecules, to be observed.
    • However, we can sometimes infer some of the particle's unobservable properties from what we can observe.
    • National portraits typically underestimate change as well as variation, and their explanatory schemas commonly invoke unobservable traditions more than socio-economic institutions.
    • I tend to think that statements like ‘there is an unobservable pink fairy on my shoulder’ are meaningless.
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