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词汇 transposition
释义

Definition of transposition in English:

transposition

noun tranzpəˈzɪʃ(ə)ntrɑːnspəˈzɪʃ(ə)ntrɑːnzpəˈzɪʃ(ə)ntranspəˈzɪʃ(ə)nˌtræn(t)spəˈzɪʃ(ə)n
mass noun
  • 1The action of transposing something.

    互换,换位

    transposition of word order

    词序的换位。

    count noun a transposition of an old story into a contemporary context

    一个古老故事的现代翻版。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • In January 1986 we performed our first elective switch operation for simple transposition of the great arteries.
    • An alternative explanation, which we cannot exclude, is that transposition and deletion events occurred in different generations.
    • Not that I have any objection to transposition - quite the opposite - but it would seem sensible to me, if the High C can't be hit, to go with the A as Verdi intended.
    • Unlike directives, EU regulations have the force of law without requiring transposition into national legislation.
    • They possess a replicative mode of transposition, so that the insertions are mostly stable.
    • Neither substitution nor transposition works well by itself.
    • Since MITEs with coding capacity were previously unknown, the mechanism underlying their transposition remained elusive.
    • For some elements, the mode of transposition is unknown, and they are either referred to as class III or left unclassified.
    • The increase in transposition observed over the first 24 hr could reflect increased transposase translation with time.
    • A duplication-transposition model based on seven duplications and four transpositions of MHC class I genes has also been proposed.
    • Since neither mating type switching nor transposition will be discussed here in further detail the interested reader is referred to the reviews cited in this paragraph.
    • The frequent use of the 12-note operation of transposition and the occasional use of inversion and retrograde
    • It has been suggested that transposition could provide a mechanism for this behavior.
    • Transposable elements are divided into two major classes according to their mode of transposition.
    • He said the Department of Health had years of notice to ensure the smooth transposition of the EU directive into Irish law.
    Synonyms
    substitution, exchange, switch, switching, swap, swapping, reversal, inversion, change, rearrangement, reordering, replacement, replacing
    1. 1.1count noun A thing that has been produced by transposing something.
      互换,换位
      many acclaimed novels and plays have been little more than modern transpositions of classic myth
      Example sentencesExamples
      • But divas and divos routinely substituted arias of their own choosing, and most operas developed ‘traditional’ cuts and transpositions.
      • This music is now far beyond his reach - even with downward transpositions, he had to omit the climactic high note in his last-act aria on opening night.
      • At the time, he had been nominated for a Tony award for originating the character of Maureen in Rent, a transposition of La Bohème to the Lower East Side.
      • An audience that picked up none of the Shakespearian echoes and transpositions would still have a very entertaining - and moving - evening.
      • There were very few transpositions of transposable elements or microsatellite mutations in these lines, evidence, in fact, for the absence of contamination by exogenous flies.
      • His latest production, for example, seems to me a brilliant transposition from page to screen, a beautiful hybrid.
      • These two meditations are based on ‘modes of limited transposition’, chromatic modes, used harmonically, whose strange colours derive from the limited number of possible transpositions.
      • He explains the importance of keeping options open, not prematurely resolving tension, not unnecessarily allowing transpositions, etc.
      • Eroding the familiar, bending form and style, comfort and stability blur and sublimate in her supple poetic transpositions of genre, gender, sexuality, and race.
      • It all started out with a few unplanned transpositions while I was doing arrangements for my wind quintet on Sibelius, but now it's gotten completely out of hand.
      • It is almost absent from the second movement, but becomes important again, generally allied to motif ‘y’ or its transpositions, in the third, the Scherzo.
      • Having seen in my few years on this job many vowel-blend and diphthong transpositions, I can well believe someone wrote that.
      • By the same token, boxing is a transposition of a noble pursuit of post-pub Britain into an artificial environment of padded gloves and gumshields.
      • However, Skalkottas does employ transpositions both for their local (for the purposes of developing variation) and their large-scale (as a means of formal construction) consequences.
      • Burgess' treatment of transpositions deserves some discussion.
      • If there's one great insight that he brings in this transposition of Uncle Vanya to 1960s north-east Scotland, it's that it's a very funny play.

Derivatives

  • transpositional

  • adjective
    • It is the underlying assumption of this paper that the transformation of interior into exterior constitutes a specific instance of the transpositional processes discussed therein.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Therefore, it is not surprising that parallels are drawn between transpositional activity and the virulence of conventional parasites.
      • This suggests that the insertion could affect either the transcriptional or the transpositional activity of the retrotransposons or the epigenetic state of that chromosomal region.
      • These differences suggest that the structures of these elements are somewhat labile, and that different arrangements have evolved, all of which are compatible with transpositional activity.
      • Assays performed in Drosophila S2 cells and Drosophila embryos demonstrated the transpositional activity of Herves.
  • transpositive

  • adjective -ˈpɒzɪtɪv

Origin

Mid 16th century: from late Latin transpositio(n-) (see trans-, position).

Definition of transposition in US English:

transposition

nounˌtran(t)spəˈziSH(ə)nˌtræn(t)spəˈzɪʃ(ə)n
  • 1The action of transposing something.

    互换,换位

    transposition of word order

    词序的换位。

    a transposition of an old story into a contemporary context

    一个古老故事的现代翻版。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • They possess a replicative mode of transposition, so that the insertions are mostly stable.
    • In January 1986 we performed our first elective switch operation for simple transposition of the great arteries.
    • Not that I have any objection to transposition - quite the opposite - but it would seem sensible to me, if the High C can't be hit, to go with the A as Verdi intended.
    • Since neither mating type switching nor transposition will be discussed here in further detail the interested reader is referred to the reviews cited in this paragraph.
    • He said the Department of Health had years of notice to ensure the smooth transposition of the EU directive into Irish law.
    • For some elements, the mode of transposition is unknown, and they are either referred to as class III or left unclassified.
    • The increase in transposition observed over the first 24 hr could reflect increased transposase translation with time.
    • A duplication-transposition model based on seven duplications and four transpositions of MHC class I genes has also been proposed.
    • An alternative explanation, which we cannot exclude, is that transposition and deletion events occurred in different generations.
    • It has been suggested that transposition could provide a mechanism for this behavior.
    • The frequent use of the 12-note operation of transposition and the occasional use of inversion and retrograde
    • Transposable elements are divided into two major classes according to their mode of transposition.
    • Since MITEs with coding capacity were previously unknown, the mechanism underlying their transposition remained elusive.
    • Neither substitution nor transposition works well by itself.
    • Unlike directives, EU regulations have the force of law without requiring transposition into national legislation.
    Synonyms
    substitution, exchange, switch, switching, swap, swapping, reversal, inversion, change, rearrangement, reordering, replacement, replacing
    1. 1.1 A thing that has been produced by transposing something.
      互换,换位
      in China, the dragon is a transposition of the serpent

      在中国,龙是蛇的变体。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • By the same token, boxing is a transposition of a noble pursuit of post-pub Britain into an artificial environment of padded gloves and gumshields.
      • But divas and divos routinely substituted arias of their own choosing, and most operas developed ‘traditional’ cuts and transpositions.
      • There were very few transpositions of transposable elements or microsatellite mutations in these lines, evidence, in fact, for the absence of contamination by exogenous flies.
      • However, Skalkottas does employ transpositions both for their local (for the purposes of developing variation) and their large-scale (as a means of formal construction) consequences.
      • Burgess' treatment of transpositions deserves some discussion.
      • Having seen in my few years on this job many vowel-blend and diphthong transpositions, I can well believe someone wrote that.
      • At the time, he had been nominated for a Tony award for originating the character of Maureen in Rent, a transposition of La Bohème to the Lower East Side.
      • This music is now far beyond his reach - even with downward transpositions, he had to omit the climactic high note in his last-act aria on opening night.
      • It is almost absent from the second movement, but becomes important again, generally allied to motif ‘y’ or its transpositions, in the third, the Scherzo.
      • His latest production, for example, seems to me a brilliant transposition from page to screen, a beautiful hybrid.
      • He explains the importance of keeping options open, not prematurely resolving tension, not unnecessarily allowing transpositions, etc.
      • It all started out with a few unplanned transpositions while I was doing arrangements for my wind quintet on Sibelius, but now it's gotten completely out of hand.
      • These two meditations are based on ‘modes of limited transposition’, chromatic modes, used harmonically, whose strange colours derive from the limited number of possible transpositions.
      • If there's one great insight that he brings in this transposition of Uncle Vanya to 1960s north-east Scotland, it's that it's a very funny play.
      • An audience that picked up none of the Shakespearian echoes and transpositions would still have a very entertaining - and moving - evening.
      • Eroding the familiar, bending form and style, comfort and stability blur and sublimate in her supple poetic transpositions of genre, gender, sexuality, and race.

Origin

Mid 16th century: from late Latin transpositio(n-) (see trans-, position).

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