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单词 bioscience
释义

Definition of bioscience in English:

bioscience

noun bʌɪəʊˈsʌɪənsˈbaɪoʊˌsaɪəns
  • Any of the life sciences.

    生物科学

    Example sentencesExamples
    • It is has changed in the 21st century with genetic engineering and the biosciences shift to human cloning.
    • The university is set to invest a further €16 million in a new biosciences and electronic engineering facility.
    • As biosciences and associated technologies advance, and they will, so will be the need for enhanced capabilities to deal with their ethical, legal, social and economic consequences.
    • I was told that while they could not give me a place on the advertised course, I could take a two-year diploma in biosciences and then take exams to transfer to the biomedical science course.
    • These include advanced engineering and metals; food and drink; chemicals, biosciences and digital industries taking in the electronics sector.
    • Similarly, to bolster the sciences and technology, Summers is talking about launching an engineering school while expanding initiatives in the biosciences and other cutting-edge fields.
    • In London, the focus was on GE's agreed takeover bid, worth US $9.5 billion, for British medical diagnostics and biosciences firm Amersham, ending days of speculation about the identity of the suitor.
    • The emergence of the new economy, with digital media and biosciences replacing traditional industries, has led to issues of sustainability.
    • Here information and biosciences merge and the possibility of new technologies are emerging.
    • The chemistry and biosciences seminar will cover areas like the development of Indian fisheries with special reference to Kerala, genomics and gene therapy as well as group theory as applicable to complexes.
    • Teaching and learning should tackle the person's subjective experience of illness as well as the bioscience underpinning its diagnosis and management.
    • Researchers found that today 40 states specifically target the biosciences for development and all 50 states have economic development initiatives available to assist bioscience companies.
    • Some of this can be attributed to the sort of corporate mix Cambridge attracts - fewer once-modish internet or software companies, more research-intensive firms in biosciences, medical technology and the like.
    • As with many of the biosciences, the exciting developments in immunology reported in the literature often seem slightly divorced from current clinical practice.
    • Engineering and medicine apart, the biosciences are throwing up lots of cushy jobs.
    • And the report predicts strong growth for Yorkshire Forward's five high-growth clusters - advanced engineering and metals, chemicals, biosciences, digital industries, and food and drink.
    • A larger proportion of the workforce in future will be employed in areas such as the biosciences, technology and higher education.
    • Most bioscience and genetics based businesses' main concern is the establishment and protection of intellectual property rights.
    • Indeed York is outstripping Cambridge, in the area of biosciences and computer sciences’.
    • In the first and second year the core sciences will have emphasis on the fundamentals such as physics, chemistry, mathematics and bioscience.

Derivatives

  • bioscientist

  • noun ˈbʌɪəʊˌsʌɪəntɪstˈbaɪoʊˌsaɪəntəst
    • Person who studies or has expert knowledge of any of the life sciences.

      the leading bioscientist in the study
      Example sentencesExamples
      • It is interesting to recall that bioscientists unlike those involved in the Manhattan Project, seem to have been sensitized to the need for keeping in sight the ethical consequences of their research.
      • From the portrayal of bioscientists by the media, the public is given the impression that critics of GM constitute a tiny minority among the research community.
      • Our figures include foreign as well as domestic citations, because 40 percent of all paper citations in U.S. agricultural biotech patents now cite papers written by foreign bioscientists.

Definition of bioscience in US English:

bioscience

nounˈbīōˌsīənsˈbaɪoʊˌsaɪəns
  • Any of the life sciences.

    生物科学

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Here information and biosciences merge and the possibility of new technologies are emerging.
    • I was told that while they could not give me a place on the advertised course, I could take a two-year diploma in biosciences and then take exams to transfer to the biomedical science course.
    • A larger proportion of the workforce in future will be employed in areas such as the biosciences, technology and higher education.
    • Researchers found that today 40 states specifically target the biosciences for development and all 50 states have economic development initiatives available to assist bioscience companies.
    • Most bioscience and genetics based businesses' main concern is the establishment and protection of intellectual property rights.
    • In the first and second year the core sciences will have emphasis on the fundamentals such as physics, chemistry, mathematics and bioscience.
    • These include advanced engineering and metals; food and drink; chemicals, biosciences and digital industries taking in the electronics sector.
    • It is has changed in the 21st century with genetic engineering and the biosciences shift to human cloning.
    • As biosciences and associated technologies advance, and they will, so will be the need for enhanced capabilities to deal with their ethical, legal, social and economic consequences.
    • Teaching and learning should tackle the person's subjective experience of illness as well as the bioscience underpinning its diagnosis and management.
    • The emergence of the new economy, with digital media and biosciences replacing traditional industries, has led to issues of sustainability.
    • The university is set to invest a further €16 million in a new biosciences and electronic engineering facility.
    • And the report predicts strong growth for Yorkshire Forward's five high-growth clusters - advanced engineering and metals, chemicals, biosciences, digital industries, and food and drink.
    • As with many of the biosciences, the exciting developments in immunology reported in the literature often seem slightly divorced from current clinical practice.
    • In London, the focus was on GE's agreed takeover bid, worth US $9.5 billion, for British medical diagnostics and biosciences firm Amersham, ending days of speculation about the identity of the suitor.
    • Indeed York is outstripping Cambridge, in the area of biosciences and computer sciences’.
    • Similarly, to bolster the sciences and technology, Summers is talking about launching an engineering school while expanding initiatives in the biosciences and other cutting-edge fields.
    • Engineering and medicine apart, the biosciences are throwing up lots of cushy jobs.
    • Some of this can be attributed to the sort of corporate mix Cambridge attracts - fewer once-modish internet or software companies, more research-intensive firms in biosciences, medical technology and the like.
    • The chemistry and biosciences seminar will cover areas like the development of Indian fisheries with special reference to Kerala, genomics and gene therapy as well as group theory as applicable to complexes.
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更新时间:2024/12/27 19:15:45