快好知 kuaihz


presumably造句
(121) Here presumably Miss Wharton and her fellow helpers would arrange the flowers, wash out their dusters, refresh themselves with tea. (122) Presumably all that has been compared is the percentage of pupils achieving certain levels at age 11 and then at 14. (123) Another, presumably later, inhumation cemetery lay in and around the southern boundary ditch at its Ryknild Street end. (124) Presumably, in the very early universe all the dimensions would have been very curved. (125) These are patients cut off from their capacity to feel, presumably to protect themselves from emotional pain. (126) This is ironic because the parties, having chosen expert determination, presumably wanted to avoid court proceedings. (127) Israel would presumably lift its naval blockade. (128) Napoleon is presumably the greatest militarist of modern times. (129) Some kind of swiftlet, presumably Himalayan. (130) An investor presumably would be willing to pay $10 to buy Solarwind company, because this restaurant earns the normal 5 % return which justifies the fair market value of its net identifiable assets. (131) This presumably would come as news to the judges in Hanoi and Haiphong who, earlier this month, sentenced nine democracy activists to jail terms of up to six years in a series of short trials. (132) Presumably, that means letting California, New York, New Jersey, and Illinois default, if it comes to that. (133) And , presumably, the more little crickets that male will sire. (134) Soon he was within arm's length of the girl, but the way was blocked by an enormous prole and an almost equally enormous woman, presumably his wife, who seemed to form an impenetrable wall of flesh. (135) Biologists have long recognized that mammals larger than rabbits tend to shrink on small islands, presumably as an adaptive response to the limited food supply. (136) Bacon not only despised the syllogism, but undervalued mathematics, presumably as insufficiently experimental. He was virulently hostile to Aristotle, but thought very highly of Democritus. (137) One of the effects of prostaglandins is to sensitise nerve endings , causing pain presumably to prevent us from causing further harm to the area . (138) Presumably, the influx in glial cells would also activate enzymes that would marshal a response. (139) Should these projects be part of the Olympic budget or (because they will presumably serve the city for years afterward) part of the general municipal budget? (140) Well, presumably because whatever cognitive structures it takes in your brain to underwrite the ability to P-function, those cognitive structures have been broken, so they no longer work. (141) For historical reasons, presumably the Western domination of Egyptology, there is very little material in Arabic, other than that which is written for domestic consumption in Egypt. (142) However, the evolutionary positions of the spotted fever group rickettsia species were presumably different between the two. (143) Previous research already had fingered increased levels and actions of one particular enzyme, AMPK, in brain cells as a control lever for appetite in mice and presumably humans. (144) Note: The Zodiac is known to intentionally misspell words and uses bad grammar in order to avoid identification and to presumably throw off professional code breakers. (145) The study also calls into question the notion that having biological children - who presumably might be expected to take care of you in old age - is a ticket to well-being in your golden years. (146) Amateur video posted online showed bloody, presumably dead individuals in civilian garb. (147) Presumably, countries that attract more foreign direct investment suffer less than those that have a greater amount of footloose portfolio investment or short-term bank lending. (148) But now Essig is giving us another reason: buying food from local farmers and producers (presumably at a farmer's market) is a way to socialize and make connections. (149) In one of the first cinematics, he is shown taking over a Clawhammer Defense Industries compound, a fictional defence contractor , presumably to steal something or just destroy it. (150) This was, he speculated, "presumably an anagram, somehow based on a character named Laura".