isolation造句(91) But this sense of isolation and estrangement was easy enough to understand, and certainly indicated no abnormality.
(92) Cultural isolation may be damaging to the business sector of one nation.
(93) Yet keep in mind: your children are in the safest place and the most complete isolation on our hilltop.
(94) Each sentence could be studied in isolation and be analysed in terms of grammatical construction, lexical content and so on.
(95) However, this does not in itself overcome the language problems which have arisen during the period of isolation.
(96) Macroconsolidation within organizations provides an ideal breeding ground for insulation, isolation, and illusion.
(97) The quick deposition of these sediments resulted in clay compaction and the isolation of porous and permeable sand with impermeable shales.
(98) In the face of the current crisis in contract doctrine, however, recent studies have partially overcome this disciplinary isolation.
(99) The editorial also took the position that isolation would not eradicate the disease.
(100) By this, presumably, was meant the isolation of single figures in sequential positions like a Muybridge series in three dimensions.
(101) To stare at an empty vastness would be dispiriting; perhaps also it would bring about too great a sense of isolation.
(102) The Isolation Plant is an immense underground catacomb of storage cells.
(103) But there is an interdependence between the various themes in his work that makes it difficult to deal with them in isolation.
(104) To begin with Darwin had solved this problem by invoking geographical isolation.
(105) On the early lunar landing missions, the plan called for the astronauts to be transferred straight into an isolation chamber.
(106) Moreover, the isolation of the men of the wetlands led to inbreeding.
(107) The island's isolation has been a major factor in preserving its beauty.
(108) Although our inner lives have been relentlessly diminished by ecosocial isolation, the antidote lies in recovering awareness of our context.
(109) His poems were a desperate expression of his loneliness and isolation.
(110) It could be argued that a poorly performing ICU is unlikely to occur in isolation.
(111) This may involve developing life plans with the individuals for whom they are responsible in isolation from other agencies.
(112) In contrast, the general view is that disposing of high-level waste must involve isolation and containment.
(113) Boredom, isolation and loneliness can lead to alcoholism, marriage breakdowns and a failure to complete the assignment.
(114) In the liberal model, education tends to be seen, to some extent, in isolation from the social structure.
(115) For instance, if environmental changes are capricious, the animal's migration viewed in isolation will also be capricious.
(116) The collapse of the Labour government had little effect on the Party's isolation.
(117) Moore's method of isolation bids us try to conceive a sample of such education in entire isolation.
(118) But the Byzantine emperors were themselves no more trusting and would generally keep their foreign envoys in virtual isolation.
(119) He does not try to explicate knowledge in terms of an object in isolation from the knowing subject.
(120) Each story was separate and passed on in isolation with the possible exception of the story of the Passion.