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单词 subserve
释义

Definition of subserve in English:

subserve

verb səbˈsəːvsəbˈsərv
[with object]
  • Help to further or promote.

    促进;推动

    they extended the uses of writing to subserve their political interest

    他们将写作用于促进自己的政治利益。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Another characteristic of the study of sensory aging is that the stimuli used are relatively impoverished in that they are often devoid of the environmental information that subserves perception, attention, and memory.
    • Because political and economic institutions can affect man's moral character, Commons reasoned that they should create conditions subserving all individuals' self-development.
    • These results indicate that, depending on the unique features of a given learning, experience, very different classes of mechanisms can be engaged to subserve memory in a particular time domain.
    • The magnitude code also subserves numeral-size judgments and thereby provides an estimate of problem-size in the context of arithmetic.
    • We can unambiguously conclude that there is a situation in which voluntarily oriented attention subserves feature integration when tested with multiple search items.
    • He would be expected to subserve American interests in return.
    • But in the field of human rights the evidence of heinous transgressions would not even induce a formal reprimand, except when it subserves other interests.
    • Evidence is now mounting that the ability to recognize facial expressions of emotion is subserved by specialized neural circuitry.
    • Crustacean motor neurons subserving locomotion are specialized for the type of activity in which they normally participate.
    • Cytoskeletal organization and reorganization also plays a prominent role as scaffolding for proteins subserving membrane excitability.
    • Pelvic striated muscle contractions are subserved by the perineal nerve, and autonomic fibers send efferent impulses to effect the other visceral motor responses.
    • The effects of brain trauma often relate to functions subserved by the specific area of brain damage.
    • Conceptually, the idea is that religion, which may impede certain individual reproductive interests, could nevertheless subserve the interests of groups.
    • The government seems to have been privatised; its instruments have to subserve party interests.
    • In saying this, I mean that we take into consideration the interests that are subserved by practices of epistemic assessment.
    • Thus his adhesion to the doctrine of the class war involves his opposition to all measures subserving the interest of any section of capitalism.
    • To subserve the needs of farmers better and to move towards a sustainable actuarial regime I propose to set up a new Corporation for Agriculture Insurance to be promoted by the existing public sector general insurance companies.
    • In the encoding-complex view, the importance of such phenomena is that they suggest that the modular systems that subserve number processing often communicate interactively rather than additively.
    • The criterion of the goodness of a law is the principle of Utility, the measure in which it subserves the happiness to which every individual is equally entitled.
    • The changes are not only in brain regions controlling attention, but also in regions that subserve impulse control.

Origin

Mid 17th century: from Latin subservire (see sub-, serve).

Rhymes

conserve, curve, Deneuve, derv, hors d'oeuvre, nerve, observe, roman-fleuve, serve, swerve, verve

Definition of subserve in US English:

subserve

verbsəbˈsərvsəbˈsərv
[with object]
  • Help to further or promote.

    促进;推动

    officers are appointed to subserve their own profit and convenience
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Because political and economic institutions can affect man's moral character, Commons reasoned that they should create conditions subserving all individuals' self-development.
    • Evidence is now mounting that the ability to recognize facial expressions of emotion is subserved by specialized neural circuitry.
    • In the encoding-complex view, the importance of such phenomena is that they suggest that the modular systems that subserve number processing often communicate interactively rather than additively.
    • Conceptually, the idea is that religion, which may impede certain individual reproductive interests, could nevertheless subserve the interests of groups.
    • To subserve the needs of farmers better and to move towards a sustainable actuarial regime I propose to set up a new Corporation for Agriculture Insurance to be promoted by the existing public sector general insurance companies.
    • The effects of brain trauma often relate to functions subserved by the specific area of brain damage.
    • He would be expected to subserve American interests in return.
    • Another characteristic of the study of sensory aging is that the stimuli used are relatively impoverished in that they are often devoid of the environmental information that subserves perception, attention, and memory.
    • The magnitude code also subserves numeral-size judgments and thereby provides an estimate of problem-size in the context of arithmetic.
    • Pelvic striated muscle contractions are subserved by the perineal nerve, and autonomic fibers send efferent impulses to effect the other visceral motor responses.
    • Crustacean motor neurons subserving locomotion are specialized for the type of activity in which they normally participate.
    • The criterion of the goodness of a law is the principle of Utility, the measure in which it subserves the happiness to which every individual is equally entitled.
    • Thus his adhesion to the doctrine of the class war involves his opposition to all measures subserving the interest of any section of capitalism.
    • These results indicate that, depending on the unique features of a given learning, experience, very different classes of mechanisms can be engaged to subserve memory in a particular time domain.
    • In saying this, I mean that we take into consideration the interests that are subserved by practices of epistemic assessment.
    • But in the field of human rights the evidence of heinous transgressions would not even induce a formal reprimand, except when it subserves other interests.
    • The government seems to have been privatised; its instruments have to subserve party interests.
    • Cytoskeletal organization and reorganization also plays a prominent role as scaffolding for proteins subserving membrane excitability.
    • We can unambiguously conclude that there is a situation in which voluntarily oriented attention subserves feature integration when tested with multiple search items.
    • The changes are not only in brain regions controlling attention, but also in regions that subserve impulse control.

Origin

Mid 17th century: from Latin subservire (see sub-, serve).

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更新时间:2024/10/19 10:23:17