单词 | cohort |
释义 | cohort From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishcohortco‧hort /ˈkəʊhɔːt $ ˈkoʊhɔːrt/ noun [countable]1 GROUP OF PEOPLEsomeone’s cohorts are their friends who support them and stay loyal to them – used to show disapproval Mark and his cohorts eventually emerged from the studio.2 technical a group of people of the same age, social class etc, especially when they are being studied a cohort of 386 patients aged 65 plusExamples from the Corpuscohort• Our findings are based on a cohort of women seeking insemination treatment because their partners had a fertility problem.• The 74 million Baby-Boom cohort dwarfs the 40 million Generation Xers.• Hawk and his cohorts cheated Jack out of a fortune.• It is highly probable that many of those in the initial cohort of patients would have died.• "Baby boomers" are the largest cohort of Americans living today.• Figures for 1984 show 67. 4 percent of the cohort infected.• The overall in-hospital mortality of 15.6% of this cohort was similar to short-term mortality of similar cohorts in previous studies.• By 1984,43. 7 percent of the New York cohort was infected.Origin cohort (1400-1500) Latin cohors “enclosed place, people in an enclosure, unit of soldiers in the ancient Roman army” |
随便看 |
英语词典包含170365条英英释义在线翻译词条,基本涵盖了全部常用单词的英英翻译及用法,是英语学习的有利工具。