释义 |
Definition of countable in English: countableadjective ˈkaʊntəb(ə)lˈkaʊn(t)əb(ə)l 1Able to be counted. 可数的 the Church is made up of countable people the bundles of energy were too numerous to be countable Example sentencesExamples - The world, Heidegger says, is not the mere collection of the countable or uncountable, familiar and unfamiliar things that are at hand.
- Mathematicians divide infinite sets into two categories, countable and uncountable sets.
- In order to cast a countable vote, a voter must read and follow a set of rudimentary instructions.
- As might be expected Cantor went on to find other kinds of infinities that were not countable by the rules he had established.
- We could add any individual real number to the set of rational numbers and still have a countable collection, just as we may be able to prove individual problems from a non-algorithmic class of problems.
- In the central aspects of explaining the ideas on countable numbers, Aczel does an excellent job, while in peripheral ideas such as explaining the Reimann sphere he does displays a less then exemplary effort.
- The plates were incubated until the colonies were easily countable.
- At night the stars were so close it was like a Hollywood set; more bright lights than humanly countable.
- By molecules, we generally mean assemblies of a discrete, countable number of atoms.
- In truth, I imagine my real audience figure only just reaches the maximum number countable using my fingers… on just one hand.
- The difference is, when they do so online, it is countable, transcribable, and therefore more readily part of the political battle and stories thereof.
- The friends I made with this group are not countable.
- Of course, if there were no infinite sets then there would be no infinite numbers, countable or uncountable, and so an Aristotelian would not accept the result of this proof as a fact.
- I remain hopeful that, in the din created by the current climate of pre-determined goals, products, standards, and countable outcomes, we will be able to hear.
- The concept of reasoning is a key component of activities that capture children's interest-for example, as they interact with countable objects during the acquisition of math skills.
- After irradiation, the cells were left for 2 weeks under standard conditions to allow the formation of countable colonies.
- A full hierarchical perspective suggests a continuum of variation rather than a countable number of objects.
- Chocolates in a box are countable - two chocolates, a few chocolates, many chocolates, but who's counting?
- I haven't met personally one except I knew there was one or two students at the university and I heard from people saying that there are a countable number of Jewish families still living in Baghdad.
- Thus, 100 countable individuals was a targeted minimum that was easily surpassed in many samples but not achieved in others.
- 1.1Grammar (of a noun) that can form a plural or be used with the indefinite article.
‘carton’ and ‘refrigerator’ are countable nouns
Derivativesadverb Some words can be used both countably and uncountably: wine, as in This is a splendid wine and Have some more wine. Example sentencesExamples - First, when the number of molecules regulating a biological process becomes countably small, chance distributions come into play such that some regulatory molecules can vary severalfold between individual cells.
- There are uncountably many subsets of N, but since there are only countably many Turing machines, there can be only countably many decidable sets.
- He showed that was computable, but since only countably many real numbers are computable, most real numbers are not computable.
Definition of countable in US English: countableadjectiveˈkoun(t)əb(ə)lˈkaʊn(t)əb(ə)l 1Able to be counted. 可数的 Example sentencesExamples - At night the stars were so close it was like a Hollywood set; more bright lights than humanly countable.
- Mathematicians divide infinite sets into two categories, countable and uncountable sets.
- The friends I made with this group are not countable.
- Chocolates in a box are countable - two chocolates, a few chocolates, many chocolates, but who's counting?
- I haven't met personally one except I knew there was one or two students at the university and I heard from people saying that there are a countable number of Jewish families still living in Baghdad.
- The world, Heidegger says, is not the mere collection of the countable or uncountable, familiar and unfamiliar things that are at hand.
- In truth, I imagine my real audience figure only just reaches the maximum number countable using my fingers… on just one hand.
- The plates were incubated until the colonies were easily countable.
- After irradiation, the cells were left for 2 weeks under standard conditions to allow the formation of countable colonies.
- By molecules, we generally mean assemblies of a discrete, countable number of atoms.
- A full hierarchical perspective suggests a continuum of variation rather than a countable number of objects.
- I remain hopeful that, in the din created by the current climate of pre-determined goals, products, standards, and countable outcomes, we will be able to hear.
- Of course, if there were no infinite sets then there would be no infinite numbers, countable or uncountable, and so an Aristotelian would not accept the result of this proof as a fact.
- The concept of reasoning is a key component of activities that capture children's interest-for example, as they interact with countable objects during the acquisition of math skills.
- The difference is, when they do so online, it is countable, transcribable, and therefore more readily part of the political battle and stories thereof.
- In order to cast a countable vote, a voter must read and follow a set of rudimentary instructions.
- We could add any individual real number to the set of rational numbers and still have a countable collection, just as we may be able to prove individual problems from a non-algorithmic class of problems.
- Thus, 100 countable individuals was a targeted minimum that was easily surpassed in many samples but not achieved in others.
- As might be expected Cantor went on to find other kinds of infinities that were not countable by the rules he had established.
- In the central aspects of explaining the ideas on countable numbers, Aczel does an excellent job, while in peripheral ideas such as explaining the Reimann sphere he does displays a less then exemplary effort.
- 1.1Grammar (of a noun) that can form a plural or be used with the indefinite article.
‘carton’ and ‘refrigerator’ are countable nouns
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