释义 |
observableob‧ser‧va‧ble /əbˈzɜːvəbəl $ -ɜːr-/ adjective - According to others it was more properly a generic term used loosely to cover a wide assortment of observable cutaneous conditions.
- If it is to have any practical value a recording system must be concerned with measuring observable behaviour.
- It refers to observable behaviors-sensorimotor and conceptual-that reflect intellectual activity.
- Primary qualities belong not only to observable substances such as gold, but also to the minute corpuscles which make them up.
- The chips are indeed observable, but the difference between them is not.
- Then the observable quantity, the orbital decay rate. is.
- This may provide the first observable category of classroom behaviour for a workable schedule.
- Within a few weeks of birth, initial accommodations on the part of the child are usually observable.
ADVERB► directly· Motives are never directly observable whereas behaviour always is.· Evaporation is not usually directly observable.· No, each situation - recovery or relapse - can be verified by other people and has directly observable practical consequences.· The problem which the Phillips-Lipsey model then had to confront was one of measurability: not a directly observable magnitude.· The shortcomings of such an approach lie in the preoccupation with social phenomena which are directly observable.· Since it is not directly observable, it must be measured indirectly. NOUN► fact· Anthropology is potentially a positivist's paradise, inviting an endless recording of observable facts and data.· The question which hung over this whole discussion, though, was how beliefs about linguistic behaviour relate to the observable facts.· At the manifest level of observable facts, the differences may be as significant as the similarities.· Even such observable facts as churchgoing are hard to interpret. something that is observable can be seen or noticed → noticeable: an observable change in behaviour—observably adverb |