释义 |
Definition of lineation in English: lineationnoun ˌlɪnɪˈeɪʃ(ə)nˌlinēˈāSHən mass noun1The action or process of drawing lines or marking with lines. 画线,标线(指动作或过程) Example sentencesExamples - It would be awkward to respect written lineation sometimes and to ignore it at other times.
- So too with any great tradition of poetry: we must have a place to start, the conventions of lineation, and along with them conventions of stanza, poetic form, and chapter.
- The counterpoint between lineation and grammar in a poem may itself be subject to a further articulation, thought, which as its own periods are superimposed introduces new patterns of reduction and amplification.
- That is, the space and lineation achieve aural and visual effects which materially reinforce the poetic message of bleakness.
- The insistent lineation sifts sentences into phrases and words, so that ‘Bolt,’ ‘Grounds,’ and ‘Chips’ can be read as either nouns or verbs.
- It is as if just by isolating language on the page, introducing a certain spacing and lineation, the words are made to speak in a new way.
- 1.1count noun A line or linear marking; an arrangement or group of lines.
画线;标线;线布局 磁分行。 Example sentencesExamples - Even at ocean - ocean subduction zones, one plate is destroyed, together with the record of magnetic lineations carried on it.
- Magnetic foliations and lineations obtained from these sites can be interpreted directly in terms of structural information.
- It further supportis the idea that the magnetic lineations represent the stretching direction of the deforming magma.
- Magnetic lineations indicate that the continents were completely separated 90 million years ago, and these authors suggest a date probably 5 to 10 million years earlier.
- Faint and fine suturai lineations, incompletely reflecting tabulation, variably developed over surface.
- However, bedding-cleavage intersection lineations for this regionally developed cleavage display distinctly different distributions when plotted in stereographic projection.
- 1.2count noun A contour or outline.
轮廓,外廓 Example sentencesExamples - Quartz and chlorite stretching lineations show two major trends, either down dip to the SW or sub-horizontal plunge to the west or NW, i.e. along strike.
- Magnetic surveys of Watts et al. and Davey in the South Fiji Basin identified anomaly lineations 12-7A; Malahoff et al. suggested that anomaly 13 is locally present.
- The lineations show shallow easterly plunges in the north becoming steeper in the south of the Welverdiend shear zone.
- Bedrock structures tend to be more regional in spatial outline compared with glacial lineations and in satellite images are often characterized by a rough and irregular surface texture.
- The c-axis and e-lamellae pole figures also display a great circle girdle normal to the lineation, which decreases in intensity with increasing strain.
- The lineations plunge to the north in the northern part of the island and to the south in the southeastern part.
- The angle between a pair of equivalent marker lineations on a sphere constrains the rotation pole to lie on a great circle that is perpendicular to the mutual plane of those lineations.
- Albite porphyroblasts and associated greenschist-facies fabrics are folded by crenulations related to late-stage east-trending folds, lineations associated with which plunge shallowly towards east or west.
- Chlorite and quartz stretching lineations plunge in a SW or WSW direction.
- Biotite and amphibole lineations on the cleavage plane plunge consistently SW or WSW.
- Most of the granitic plutons that make up this part of the batholith are characterized by upright magmatic-state planar fabrics trending NE with shallow lineations.
- Thus there is commonly a stretching lineation visible on fabric planes that indicates the movement direction, at least during the final stages of fabric development.
- Their lineations, which are not influenced by the intrusion boundaries, faithfully reflect the stretching direction of the tectonic regime coeval with magma emplacement and cooling.
- Hornblende forms elongate prisms that define a lineation together with plagioclase.
- The lineations on the flanks of these ‘folds' trend N110 - N140 whereas they converge southeastward close to the fold hinge.
- 1.3 The division of text into lines.
分行 the punctuation and lineation are reproduced accurately 标点和分行都很准确地被复制了下来。 Example sentencesExamples - All drafts and variants are listed except for minor revisions of lineation and punctuation.
- Lederer's lineation usually coincides with units of sense and syntax - punctuation occurs more often at the end of a line than within it.
- Belabored, bejeweled-interestingly, the poem seems closer to the surface flash of many contemporary poems than the severe lineations and stark vivid colors of Plath's late work.
- Holmes' own manipulation of language allows the reader to enter into his private universe, offsetting tight lineation and formal structure with inventive wordplay.
OriginLate Middle English: from Latin lineatio(n-), from lineare 'make straight'. Definition of lineation in US English: lineationnounˌlinēˈāSHən 1The action or process of drawing lines or marking with lines. 画线,标线(指动作或过程) Example sentencesExamples - The insistent lineation sifts sentences into phrases and words, so that ‘Bolt,’ ‘Grounds,’ and ‘Chips’ can be read as either nouns or verbs.
- It is as if just by isolating language on the page, introducing a certain spacing and lineation, the words are made to speak in a new way.
- That is, the space and lineation achieve aural and visual effects which materially reinforce the poetic message of bleakness.
- The counterpoint between lineation and grammar in a poem may itself be subject to a further articulation, thought, which as its own periods are superimposed introduces new patterns of reduction and amplification.
- So too with any great tradition of poetry: we must have a place to start, the conventions of lineation, and along with them conventions of stanza, poetic form, and chapter.
- It would be awkward to respect written lineation sometimes and to ignore it at other times.
- 1.1 A line or linear marking; an arrangement or group of lines.
画线;标线;线布局 磁分行。 Example sentencesExamples - It further supportis the idea that the magnetic lineations represent the stretching direction of the deforming magma.
- Even at ocean - ocean subduction zones, one plate is destroyed, together with the record of magnetic lineations carried on it.
- However, bedding-cleavage intersection lineations for this regionally developed cleavage display distinctly different distributions when plotted in stereographic projection.
- Magnetic foliations and lineations obtained from these sites can be interpreted directly in terms of structural information.
- Faint and fine suturai lineations, incompletely reflecting tabulation, variably developed over surface.
- Magnetic lineations indicate that the continents were completely separated 90 million years ago, and these authors suggest a date probably 5 to 10 million years earlier.
- 1.2 A contour or outline.
轮廓,外廓 Example sentencesExamples - Most of the granitic plutons that make up this part of the batholith are characterized by upright magmatic-state planar fabrics trending NE with shallow lineations.
- Magnetic surveys of Watts et al. and Davey in the South Fiji Basin identified anomaly lineations 12-7A; Malahoff et al. suggested that anomaly 13 is locally present.
- The lineations plunge to the north in the northern part of the island and to the south in the southeastern part.
- Biotite and amphibole lineations on the cleavage plane plunge consistently SW or WSW.
- Chlorite and quartz stretching lineations plunge in a SW or WSW direction.
- Quartz and chlorite stretching lineations show two major trends, either down dip to the SW or sub-horizontal plunge to the west or NW, i.e. along strike.
- Their lineations, which are not influenced by the intrusion boundaries, faithfully reflect the stretching direction of the tectonic regime coeval with magma emplacement and cooling.
- Thus there is commonly a stretching lineation visible on fabric planes that indicates the movement direction, at least during the final stages of fabric development.
- Albite porphyroblasts and associated greenschist-facies fabrics are folded by crenulations related to late-stage east-trending folds, lineations associated with which plunge shallowly towards east or west.
- Hornblende forms elongate prisms that define a lineation together with plagioclase.
- The lineations show shallow easterly plunges in the north becoming steeper in the south of the Welverdiend shear zone.
- The c-axis and e-lamellae pole figures also display a great circle girdle normal to the lineation, which decreases in intensity with increasing strain.
- The lineations on the flanks of these ‘folds' trend N110 - N140 whereas they converge southeastward close to the fold hinge.
- The angle between a pair of equivalent marker lineations on a sphere constrains the rotation pole to lie on a great circle that is perpendicular to the mutual plane of those lineations.
- Bedrock structures tend to be more regional in spatial outline compared with glacial lineations and in satellite images are often characterized by a rough and irregular surface texture.
- 1.3 The division of text into lines.
分行 the punctuation and lineation are reproduced accurately 标点和分行都很准确地被复制了下来。 Example sentencesExamples - Lederer's lineation usually coincides with units of sense and syntax - punctuation occurs more often at the end of a line than within it.
- Belabored, bejeweled-interestingly, the poem seems closer to the surface flash of many contemporary poems than the severe lineations and stark vivid colors of Plath's late work.
- All drafts and variants are listed except for minor revisions of lineation and punctuation.
- Holmes' own manipulation of language allows the reader to enter into his private universe, offsetting tight lineation and formal structure with inventive wordplay.
OriginLate Middle English: from Latin lineatio(n-), from lineare ‘make straight’. |