快好知 kuaihz


primitive造句
151 It seems that primitive peoples ate human flesh for broadly two reasons. 152 Although a primitive recording programme was in progress, the company evidently had to scrape the bottom of the barrel for material. 153 We have every reason to be grateful for both sorts, as well as for pagan and primitive myth. 154 They lived in appalling conditions, lacking even the most primitive sanitation. 155 It is spectacular even in its present, relatively primitive form. 156 Roseau, the capital, had primitive street lighting, no smart shops, and nowhere to post a letter. 157 In it the founders dissolved also their own presbytery and headed back for their model to the ideal primitive church. 158 He possessed no sense of reverence for the giant fish and wanted to kill them all without Understanding his primitive motivation. 159 But the picture was the same everywhere: a strange mixture of primitive, medieval, slave existence and capitalist life. 160 Before long, I saw more signs of agriculture, on a pathetically primitive level. 161 The child can be seen as constructing knowledge at a primitive level, trying to make sense of the surrounding world. 162 The single studio was extremely primitive, consisting of an attic room with two microphones, one turntable and a mixer. 163 Nor is Lascaux primitive intellectually. Less noticeable than the massive animals are a complex series of abstract signs dotting the walls. 164 This is a direct transference to stone or brick building of the primitive wooden hut method mentioned earlier. 2. 165 Farming methods in this area of Moldavia haven't changed for decades and the primitive machinery has meant poor harvests. 166 Paradoxically, Soviet planners turned the primitive conditions and shortage of supplies at the factories to their advantage, Overy says. 167 The old anthropological concept dreamed up in the universities to describe the potentialities of nature as understood by primitive people. 168 While most Primitive Methodists were more favourable, their Conference likewise took no notice. 169 This type of simplistic explanation of primitive societies has dogged Marxist anthropology since Engels's time. 170 Not only in its primitive and pagan aspects, but also in sacred and scientific form. 171 There was already by now a political and religious system, whose primitive beliefs deified the various forces of nature. 172 Picasso's instinctive appreciation of the aesthetic principles of trial art was indicative of a new attitude towards primitive art. 173 Some of it was charmingly primitive, some of it so exotically painted it took your breath away. 174 Through him, more than through any other single force, the aesthetic worth of primitive art forms came to be recognized. 175 As well as having gills, Lungfish have primitive lungs with which they can obtain oxygen from the air. 176 As a result there ceases to exist unalloyed the direct feedback, characteristic of primitive societies, between natural conditions and consciousness. 177 Indeed, the idea that humans are curiously evolved cousins of the animals seems basic to primitive myth in general. 178 Although communicating by touch is the most primitive mode, there are culturally determined touching patterns for adults. 179 Hence the primitive history of mankind is filled with murder. 180 And the Uzi a primitive weapon, the bio suit mistaken for some sort of ceremonial armour?