释义 |
number of pronoun/quantifier—Examples:the number of molecules in a mole, about 6.022 x 10^23—number of revolutions per minute—number of sorties (of military planes)—hand foot and mouth disease, HFMD, caused by a number of intestinal viruses, usually affecting young children—drinking game where one has guess the number of small objects in the other player's closed hand—great number of people or things—the number of combinations—population (counted as number of households for census or taxation)—(classifier for the ordinal number of a crop, in the context of multiple harvests)—number of lines (in verse etc)—visit (a large number of places)—(as classifier) number of animals—number of runs or flights—age (number of years old)—classifier used indicate number of people—(number of) degrees of freedom (physics and statistics)—military achievement (e.g. number of enemy heads cut off)—get a great number of people involved (in carrying out some task)—classifier for number of exams—conventions regarding set number of words and lines, choice of tonal patterns and rhyme schemes for various types of classical Chinese poetic composition—number of infected persons—(of clothes) classifier for number of washes—ploidy (number of homologous chromosomes)—make up a shortfall in the number of people—fixed number (e.g. of places on a bus)—colloquial classifier for number of times of movement from one place to another or number of turns, times, occasions.—classifier for the number of repetitions of an action e.g. reading a book twice or three times—mostly colloquial classifier for number of times of movement from one place to another; things arranged in a row.—classifier for the frequency or number of times an action or deed is carried out - mostly used in idiomatic phrases—cetane number (quality of light diesel fuel, measured by its ignition delay)—remain constant (of a number)—the part of a number which is discarded when rounding down—regarding oneself as number one in terms of leadership, seniority or status—the part of a number the right of the decimal point (or radix point)—the factorial of a number, e.g. 5! = 5.4.3.2.1 = 120—Reynolds number (ratio of inertial forces viscous forces in fluid mechanics)— |