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单词 conjoint
释义

Definition of conjoint in English:

conjoint

adjective kənˈdʒɔɪnt
  • attributive Combining all or both people or things involved.

    the conjoint involvement of the two cerebral hemispheres
    Example sentencesExamples
    • They respond to specific treatments including individual psychotherapy, conjoint family therapy, and even pharmacotherapy.
    • Over the past 10 years, researchers and treatment professionals have begun to consider these issues in more depth, with a growing interest in conjoint couples therapy being one result.
    • As mentioned, family schemas originally develop from individual and conjoint belief systems that evolved from what the parents bring to the family relationship.
    • Indeed, there is a huge industry devoted especially to the supply of protocols, advice, personnel, and moral encouragement for inter-faith combinations and conjoint weddings.
    • I would like to hear thoughtful discussions on the nature of relational therapy and avoid limiting the definition of relational therapy to therapy that is conjoint, that is, involving more than one person in the room.
    • We accomplished this by simultaneously establishing two dramatically different, yet complementary, therapeutic environments in the context of conjoint therapy.
    • We implemented new customer surveys, focus panels, and conjoint analyses to better ensure that the specifications of the products matched up with our customers' unmet needs and requirements.
    • Today's students commonly do a conjoint degree - the equivalent of two degrees at once, but with the work crammed into four years instead of six.
    • Thirty males and 22 females (all those available) underwent conjoint therapy focusing on the marital relationship.
    • However, in individual couple therapy, the content of the conjoint session is based on issues the couple brings to the session.
    • He found the nutritional consultations most helpful and family meetings least useful, preferring to return to the individual therapist and suggesting that his parents needed conjoint therapy.
    • This study compares the two calibrations in a conjoint analysis involving donations to a public good.
    • Overall, we speculate that differences in struggle dynamics between individual and conjoint therapy may be more in terms of structural dynamics than therapist process.
    • The court said a conjoint reading of the advertisement by-laws leaves no room for doubt that all kinds of advertisement hoardings cannot be erected anywhere and everywhere.
    • The therapist is guided in conducting individual and conjoint sessions not only with nonoffending family members, but also with the offending family member.
    • Comparably little research has involved couples voluntarily seeking conjoint treatment for intimate violence.
    • Although controversy exists about the appropriateness of treating partners conjointly, there are a variety of reasons to recommend conjoint therapy for some couples in violent relationships.
    • A conjoint folk musical element is a looseness, an improvisational openness that enlivens every track.
    • We were impressed with the differences in the behavioral goals of each partner and, further, with the profoundly different treatment needs of the men and women who were seen in conjoint therapy.
    • However, because our task requires observers to identify an object's primary axis, multiple symmetry axes would lead to confusion, and would make the interpretation of conjoint and disjoint results impossible.

Derivatives

  • conjointly

  • adverb kənˈdʒɔɪntlikənˈdʒɔɪntli
    • Indeed, both the supplier and the customer have to work together in relative equality to define the exact technical characteristics of the product and its process and to develop them conjointly.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Recent research has highlighted the presence of a ‘cognitive unconscious,’ insofar as most cognitive processes - such as forming a sentence - imply nonconscious processes working conjointly with conscious ones.
      • As a result, we developed a process of teaching time-out conjointly and helping couples negotiate the parameters of its use, a procedure we came to call negotiated time-out.
      • Two indicators were used conjointly to measure the child's feelings of social isolation, including a measure of loneliness and an indicator of perceived social support.
      • In this article we advocate that in cases of low-level violence, when couples choose to remain together, certain aspects of treatment should be offered conjointly.

Origin

Middle English: from Old French, past participle of conjoindre (see conjoin).

Rhymes

anoint, appoint, joint, outpoint, point, point-to-point
 
 

Definition of conjoint in US English:

conjoint

adjective
  • attributive Combining all or both people or things involved.

    conjoint family therapy
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Comparably little research has involved couples voluntarily seeking conjoint treatment for intimate violence.
    • A conjoint folk musical element is a looseness, an improvisational openness that enlivens every track.
    • He found the nutritional consultations most helpful and family meetings least useful, preferring to return to the individual therapist and suggesting that his parents needed conjoint therapy.
    • This study compares the two calibrations in a conjoint analysis involving donations to a public good.
    • As mentioned, family schemas originally develop from individual and conjoint belief systems that evolved from what the parents bring to the family relationship.
    • We accomplished this by simultaneously establishing two dramatically different, yet complementary, therapeutic environments in the context of conjoint therapy.
    • Although controversy exists about the appropriateness of treating partners conjointly, there are a variety of reasons to recommend conjoint therapy for some couples in violent relationships.
    • Today's students commonly do a conjoint degree - the equivalent of two degrees at once, but with the work crammed into four years instead of six.
    • Over the past 10 years, researchers and treatment professionals have begun to consider these issues in more depth, with a growing interest in conjoint couples therapy being one result.
    • Indeed, there is a huge industry devoted especially to the supply of protocols, advice, personnel, and moral encouragement for inter-faith combinations and conjoint weddings.
    • I would like to hear thoughtful discussions on the nature of relational therapy and avoid limiting the definition of relational therapy to therapy that is conjoint, that is, involving more than one person in the room.
    • The court said a conjoint reading of the advertisement by-laws leaves no room for doubt that all kinds of advertisement hoardings cannot be erected anywhere and everywhere.
    • We implemented new customer surveys, focus panels, and conjoint analyses to better ensure that the specifications of the products matched up with our customers' unmet needs and requirements.
    • They respond to specific treatments including individual psychotherapy, conjoint family therapy, and even pharmacotherapy.
    • However, because our task requires observers to identify an object's primary axis, multiple symmetry axes would lead to confusion, and would make the interpretation of conjoint and disjoint results impossible.
    • We were impressed with the differences in the behavioral goals of each partner and, further, with the profoundly different treatment needs of the men and women who were seen in conjoint therapy.
    • Overall, we speculate that differences in struggle dynamics between individual and conjoint therapy may be more in terms of structural dynamics than therapist process.
    • However, in individual couple therapy, the content of the conjoint session is based on issues the couple brings to the session.
    • Thirty males and 22 females (all those available) underwent conjoint therapy focusing on the marital relationship.
    • The therapist is guided in conducting individual and conjoint sessions not only with nonoffending family members, but also with the offending family member.

Origin

Middle English: from Old French, past participle of conjoindre (see conjoin).

 
 
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更新时间:2024/12/23 21:46:20