单词 | imbricate |
释义 | BETA Examples ofimbricateDictionary> Examples ofimbricate imbricateisn’t in the Cambridge Dictionary yet. You can help! Add a definition Religious fundamentalism thus imbricates in modernity in several fascinating ways. From theCambridge English Corpus Carried out within overlapping spaces and modelled on a similar operational procedure, evacuation and deportation had become imbricated in the official mind. From theCambridge English Corpus I will deal with each of these three aspects in turn, and hope to demonstrate how archaeological pasts are deeply imbricated in these narratives. From theCambridge English Corpus The first is to posit underlying \\-ile\\ and \\-il-\\ suffixes on all perfective and applicative forms, respectively, whether theyimbricateor not. From theCambridge English Corpus In one bed (7.2 m), the flat limestone clasts are imbricated and dip to the south, and indicate transport to the north. From theCambridge English Corpus Many anthropologists take religion, language, and culture to be fundamentally imbricated. From theCambridge English Corpus We interpret that severalimbricatethrusts are responsible for the complex geometry of this fold forelimb. From theCambridge English Corpus Reformism, via the central tropes of enlightenment, education, rationality and so on, has become imbricated with more generalised ideas about progress. From theCambridge English Corpus Beneath this, interbedded marbles, schists and diamictites have buckled and imbricated. From theCambridge English Corpus I attribute this to the requirement that only verb bases that have a prosodic trough canimbricate. From theCambridge English Corpus These narratives, always imbricated by urban geography and local politics, compellingly yoked the crime to collective preoccupations. From theCambridge English Corpus Indeed, it could be argued, women's marginalisation was imbricated in the nature and development of organised working class politics. From theCambridge English Corpus The teeth are too poorly preserved to determine whether they contacted each other and/or formed animbricatearrangement. From theCambridge English Corpus The metamorphic sole is now present along the base of the ophiolite, either parallel to the basal peridotite or inimbricatestacks beneath. From theCambridge English Corpus Most species are easily distinguished by their highly attractive, double inflorescences andimbricatecalyx-lobes. From theCambridge English Corpus They were possibly detached from the leading edge of the over-riding ophiolite thrust sheet and imbricated into the underlying melange. From theCambridge English Corpus Both the proximity of the two industries and the distinctions between them were imbricated in the spatial organization of the town. From theCambridge English Corpus Morris' texts are themselves deeply imbricated, not without their inconsistencies and contradictions, and also the subject of a sustained body of critical inquiry. From theCambridge English Corpus Hodder (1997; 1998) sees the issue of goddess archaeology as part of an ever widening global discourse in which our discipline is already deeply imbricated. From theCambridge English Corpus These examples are from corpora and from sources on the web. Any opinions in the examples do not represent the opinion of the Cambridge Dictionary editors or of Cambridge University Press or its licensors. |
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