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indeterminate造句
(61) Lunch and dinner were always the same—a tin plate piled with a suspicious pilaff, mostly rice with occasional bits of lamb and shreds of vegetable matter of indeterminate origin. (62) Poetic interpretations of this Orpheus complex may be seen in Rilke's orphic lyricism, as a lyricism which egotistically lives out an indeterminate love of others. (63) If matched pairs of tapered roller bearings arranged face-to-face or back-to-back are mounted together with a third bearing, the bearing arrangement is statically indeterminate. (64) The PET first indication was evaluation of the indeterminate solitary pulmonary nodule. (65) The French Lieutenant's Woman foregrounds the indeterminate, the polyphonic, and undecidable functions of the author. (67) Fourteen indeterminate results were obtained during the first round of T - SPOT . TB testing. (68) The foreground color chokes the background color because the foreground color is indeterminate. (69) This paper first gets definition and theorems of integers matrices, and then to discusses a new method to find the greatest common factor of integers and solves linear indeterminate equation. (70) As the model included some indeterminate factors, enumerative algorithm in detail to solve the model namely to make sure of proportion of each selected raw material was studied. (71) Also , using communications , such as an OSC, will cause indeterminate latencies. (72) Present, it is generally recognized that many structural systems are indeterminate. (73) Secondly, the content of the order is not overall, the form is nonstandard, clause meaning indeterminate. (74) The Autonomous Robots Simulation System (AR-SIM) is developed for the purpose of studying various issues concerning autonomous robots under complex indeterminate environment. (75) The solution to the dualistic simple indeterminate equation is proposed in this issue by using integer division with arithmetical compliment and iterative division. (76) Popular word has many indeterminate factors, especially in semantic uncertainness, which comes from the features of popular words. (77) John Holland is a gnomic figure of indeterminate age who once worked on the world's earliest computers, and who now teaches at the University of Michigan.