释义 |
Definition of synchronous in English: synchronousadjective ˈsɪŋkrənəsˈsɪŋkrənəs 1Existing or occurring at the same time. 同时存在的,同时发生的 glaciations were approximately synchronous in both hemispheres 冰河作用在两个半球大约是同时发生的。 Example sentencesExamples - As it happens, human ideologies will sometimes be synchronous with the Faith.
- The paramedic then resumed chest compression at a rate of 100 per minute synchronous with ventilation.
- Peaks in recruitment are roughly synchronous with similar peaks in aspen and white birch, suggesting that they may be associated with similar causes.
- More important, what is under way is the first synchronous global recession in a generation.
- Since most Italian films of this period were shot without synchronous sound, both dialogue tracks could be considered dubs.
- These relations, it seems, must be synchronous with one and other in the sense that there can be no relation which occurs in spacetime which isn't tied up or entangled with any other relation.
- I can't remember having ever seen her, and yet it seems almost impossible that we haven't crossed paths before in our synchronous daily routines.
- This reduction was synchronous with a reduction in tiller production.
- Collage offers a technique for heterogenous images to appear simultaneously synchronous and radically differentiated.
- The timing of the first and second switches is arranged to prevent simultaneous conduction of the synchronous rectifiers.
- Humans apparently need both the colors and the intensity of sunlight to stay synchronous with their own body rhythm.
- Telephone networks are optimized for synchronous and one-to-one communications.
- Are processes of identification necessarily synchronous with the temporal structures of classical narrative, and to what extent is closure effective?
- Due to the complexity and timing issues, typically no more than two storage nodes are involved simultaneously in synchronous data replication.
- In many species there is considerable overlap between the fertile periods of females due to more or less synchronous breeding.
- The lowering of montane vegetation belts in New Guinea during the last ice age was broadly synchronous with that of South America and Africa.
- However, the ability to multitask while texting is another huge advantage over the synchronous voice call.
- The average hatch time of the first release was thus approximately synchronous with that of natural egg masses, and the variance in hatch date was large.
- However, in synchronous interaction every student in the class participates simultaneously.
- Breeding in Tree Swallows is highly synchronous.
Synonyms concurrent, happening at the same time, done at the same time, contemporaneous, concomitant, coinciding, coincident, synchronized, synchronic 2Astronomy Making or denoting an orbit around the earth or another celestial body in which one revolution is completed in the period taken for the body to rotate about its axis. (卫星)同步运行的;(轨道)同步的 Example sentencesExamples - They emerge early in the year and have short, synchronous emergence periods.
- Dynamic models show that while large particles could be in synchronous rotation, smaller particles should rotate faster and look isothermal.
- Mercury was discovered by radar not to be in synchronous rotation about the Sun.
- The Red Planet's elevator, which would travel between the surface of Mars and a Mars synchronous orbit, could be constructed in Earth's orbit.
- This is because the Moon rotates exactly once per orbit, in what is described as synchronous rotation.
Derivativesadverb First, pairwise comparisons showed that tropical species, which generally breed less synchronously than temperate species, had smaller testes than their temperate counterparts. Example sentencesExamples - The increased pace of business means that processes are not only distributed, but that teamwork around these processes must happen synchronously or at least with increasingly rapid turnaround.
- However, when more than two broods were found that hatched synchronously, we matched preferentially those with a similar number of nestlings and placed in the same part or section of the stable.
- Where I spend most of my time, in Maine and in central Vermont, new leaves of all the deciduous tree species usually emerge relatively synchronously in mid-May, over the short span of about two weeks.
- Some companies synchronously replicate data over a dedicated network to a secondary site, where tape backup is taken; however the tapes still need to leave that site to provide true data protection.
OriginMid 17th century: from late Latin synchronus (from Greek sunkhronos, from sun- 'together' + khronos 'time') + -ous. Definition of synchronous in US English: synchronousadjectiveˈsiNGkrənəsˈsɪŋkrənəs 1Existing or occurring at the same time. 同时存在的,同时发生的 glaciations were approximately synchronous in both hemispheres 冰河作用在两个半球大约是同时发生的。 Example sentencesExamples - I can't remember having ever seen her, and yet it seems almost impossible that we haven't crossed paths before in our synchronous daily routines.
- Collage offers a technique for heterogenous images to appear simultaneously synchronous and radically differentiated.
- The timing of the first and second switches is arranged to prevent simultaneous conduction of the synchronous rectifiers.
- However, in synchronous interaction every student in the class participates simultaneously.
- In many species there is considerable overlap between the fertile periods of females due to more or less synchronous breeding.
- These relations, it seems, must be synchronous with one and other in the sense that there can be no relation which occurs in spacetime which isn't tied up or entangled with any other relation.
- Telephone networks are optimized for synchronous and one-to-one communications.
- Humans apparently need both the colors and the intensity of sunlight to stay synchronous with their own body rhythm.
- Are processes of identification necessarily synchronous with the temporal structures of classical narrative, and to what extent is closure effective?
- The paramedic then resumed chest compression at a rate of 100 per minute synchronous with ventilation.
- Due to the complexity and timing issues, typically no more than two storage nodes are involved simultaneously in synchronous data replication.
- Peaks in recruitment are roughly synchronous with similar peaks in aspen and white birch, suggesting that they may be associated with similar causes.
- As it happens, human ideologies will sometimes be synchronous with the Faith.
- More important, what is under way is the first synchronous global recession in a generation.
- The average hatch time of the first release was thus approximately synchronous with that of natural egg masses, and the variance in hatch date was large.
- However, the ability to multitask while texting is another huge advantage over the synchronous voice call.
- This reduction was synchronous with a reduction in tiller production.
- The lowering of montane vegetation belts in New Guinea during the last ice age was broadly synchronous with that of South America and Africa.
- Since most Italian films of this period were shot without synchronous sound, both dialogue tracks could be considered dubs.
- Breeding in Tree Swallows is highly synchronous.
Synonyms concurrent, happening at the same time, done at the same time, contemporaneous, concomitant, coinciding, coincident, synchronized, synchronic 2Astronomy (of a satellite or its orbit) making or denoting an orbit around the earth or another celestial body in which one revolution is completed in the period taken for the body to rotate about its axis. (卫星)同步运行的;(轨道)同步的 Example sentencesExamples - This is because the Moon rotates exactly once per orbit, in what is described as synchronous rotation.
- The Red Planet's elevator, which would travel between the surface of Mars and a Mars synchronous orbit, could be constructed in Earth's orbit.
- Mercury was discovered by radar not to be in synchronous rotation about the Sun.
- Dynamic models show that while large particles could be in synchronous rotation, smaller particles should rotate faster and look isothermal.
- They emerge early in the year and have short, synchronous emergence periods.
OriginMid 17th century: from late Latin synchronus (from Greek sunkhronos, from sun- ‘together’ + khronos ‘time’) + -ous. |