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单词 subjective
释义

Definition of subjective in English:

subjective

adjective səbˈdʒɛktɪvsəbˈdʒɛktɪv
  • 1Based on or influenced by personal feelings, tastes, or opinions.

    his views are highly subjective
    Contrasted with objective
    there is always the danger of making a subjective judgement
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Over a period of years a sympathetic observer notices marked changes, although such personal reflections are notoriously subjective.
    • Admissions decisions are subjective because they are based on human beings that inherently possess a great deal of variability.
    • Even the Cabinet Office's own research shows that this is discriminatory, because it is based on subjective judgements carried out by managers.
    • Instead, participants used rating scales that assessed their own subjective perception of conflict in their friendship relationships.
    • Where this minimum lies, however, is based on management's subjective judgment.
    • Essays will be scored on a six-point scale for such subjective elements as voice, style, flow, and deployment of the language.
    • The value of the items on each side of the sheet are dependent upon individual subjective valuations.
    • There is no pretense of objectivity; this is a subjective film, a personal film.
    • Whether it is ‘good’ or ‘bad’ could be a very subjective matter of opinion.
    • Whatever else it may be, authority is a subjective disposition in people to regard something else as a reliable guide in thinking and doing.
    • Although a relatively objective metalanguage can be devised to describe and discuss poetry, individual response to it is necessarily subjective.
    • It is not to be judged by the quality of the reasons advanced in support of it in the course of Parliamentary debate, nor by the subjective state of mind of individual ministers or other members.
    • The accuracy score for the medium is completely dependent on the subjective decisions of the sitter.
    • Editorial comment is the subjective view of one person, and as such not expected to be ‘balanced’ to the extent of pleasing all shades.
    • Best is a subjective judgement, my taste against yours.
    • The farther to the right the writing slants the more subjective the person is.
    • I remain surprised by how subjective this stuff seems to be.
    • I no longer trust my own subjective impressions, or those of other linguists, no matter how reputable.
    • Of course, as my grown-up child who is obviously no longer a child pointed out, it is important to understand other people's subjective experience.
    • Ultimately loss and gain I suppose are ultimately subjective, because each reader that reads a poem will have a different reaction to it.
    Synonyms
    personal, personalized, individual, internal, emotional, instinctive, intuitive, impressionistic
    biased, prejudiced, bigoted, idiosyncratic, irrational
    informal gut, gut reaction
    1. 1.1 Dependent on the mind or on an individual's perception for its existence.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • A lot of magic and NLP plays in this area of the individual's subjective experience.
      • The scientific literature has noted some gender differences in both subjective and objective responses to cocaine.
      • One of the few good ideas about consciousness that has gained some measure of agreement is that subjective feelings depend very much on the kind of body you have.
      • Consciousness is about first-person, subjective experience, and there's a fundamental gap there.
      • In concrete terms it poses difficulties - because it also makes Theism subjective.
      • Things are even more difficult when probabilities are subjective and individual beliefs may differ.
      • That is, reported differences in perceived stress may be due to differences in subjective perceptions or in differences in the amount of objective stressors.
      • In this sense their condition is epistemologically objective but ontologically subjective.
      • You can follow the software instructions to adjust your computer screen controls manually, but as you can guess, human perception is usually subjective.
      • There is nothing subjective about perceptual experience.
      • It's an alternative view of the individual's subjective reality.
      • There is a difference between my existence and the existence of a chair, which is that my existence has this subjective side - or, as you might say, inside.
      • How do physical processes in the brain give rise to the subjective life the conscious mind?
      • Milan's inner world is one that mixes hallucination with reality, subjective reverie with objective perception.
      • Consciousness is commensurate with being; all existence has a subjective aspect.
      • As Beckett dramatizes, the ultimate reality of the subjective mind is beyond the spatio-temporal limits of logical meaning.
      • Drama is a genre which is heavily oriented to the first person present, a narrative form associated with subjective experience and inner feelings.
      • Intentions are influenced by attitudes toward the behavior, subjective norms and perceptions of behavioral control.
      • The basic mechanism is subsequently extended by an abductive reasoning system which is guided by subjective probability.
      • Maternal evaluations may reflect subjective perceptions rather than the child's actual behavior.
  • 2Grammar
    Relating to or denoting a case of nouns and pronouns used for the subject of a sentence.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • The genitive would function syntactically as subjective genitive with the transactional term o-pa.
noun səbˈdʒɛktɪvsəbˈdʒɛktɪv
the subjectiveGrammar
  • The subjective case.

Derivatives

  • subjectiveness

  • noun səbˈdʒɛktɪvnəssəbˈdʒɛktɪvnəs
    • The subjectiveness of the thinking, as of the satisfaction, is obviously deliberate.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Hamsun has often been described as the father of the modern school of literature in every respect - ‘his subjectiveness, his fragmentariness, his use of flashback, his lyricism.’
      • This imprecision and subjectiveness in the ranking meant that intellectual development could occur on many fronts, which means that hillside wandering could occur with considerable latitude.
      • They spend a lot of time trying to correlate it to real-world safety; but we are a little concerned with the subjectiveness of that evaluation procedure.
      • Therefore the information obtained depends on the subjectiveness of the probability values, which is not very desirable.

Origin

Late Middle English (originally in the sense 'characteristic of a political subject, submissive'): from Latin subjectivus, from subject- 'brought under' (see subject).

 
 

Definition of subjective in US English:

subjective

adjectivesəbˈjektivsəbˈdʒɛktɪv
  • 1Based on or influenced by personal feelings, tastes, or opinions.

    his views are highly subjective
    Contrasted with objective
    there is always the danger of making a subjective judgment
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Essays will be scored on a six-point scale for such subjective elements as voice, style, flow, and deployment of the language.
    • Admissions decisions are subjective because they are based on human beings that inherently possess a great deal of variability.
    • Instead, participants used rating scales that assessed their own subjective perception of conflict in their friendship relationships.
    • Of course, as my grown-up child who is obviously no longer a child pointed out, it is important to understand other people's subjective experience.
    • Where this minimum lies, however, is based on management's subjective judgment.
    • Editorial comment is the subjective view of one person, and as such not expected to be ‘balanced’ to the extent of pleasing all shades.
    • Although a relatively objective metalanguage can be devised to describe and discuss poetry, individual response to it is necessarily subjective.
    • Ultimately loss and gain I suppose are ultimately subjective, because each reader that reads a poem will have a different reaction to it.
    • The farther to the right the writing slants the more subjective the person is.
    • The value of the items on each side of the sheet are dependent upon individual subjective valuations.
    • I no longer trust my own subjective impressions, or those of other linguists, no matter how reputable.
    • It is not to be judged by the quality of the reasons advanced in support of it in the course of Parliamentary debate, nor by the subjective state of mind of individual ministers or other members.
    • The accuracy score for the medium is completely dependent on the subjective decisions of the sitter.
    • Even the Cabinet Office's own research shows that this is discriminatory, because it is based on subjective judgements carried out by managers.
    • Best is a subjective judgement, my taste against yours.
    • Over a period of years a sympathetic observer notices marked changes, although such personal reflections are notoriously subjective.
    • Whether it is ‘good’ or ‘bad’ could be a very subjective matter of opinion.
    • There is no pretense of objectivity; this is a subjective film, a personal film.
    • Whatever else it may be, authority is a subjective disposition in people to regard something else as a reliable guide in thinking and doing.
    • I remain surprised by how subjective this stuff seems to be.
    Synonyms
    personal, personalized, individual, internal, emotional, instinctive, intuitive, impressionistic
    1. 1.1 Dependent on the mind or on an individual's perception for its existence.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • It's an alternative view of the individual's subjective reality.
      • Consciousness is about first-person, subjective experience, and there's a fundamental gap there.
      • Maternal evaluations may reflect subjective perceptions rather than the child's actual behavior.
      • Milan's inner world is one that mixes hallucination with reality, subjective reverie with objective perception.
      • There is nothing subjective about perceptual experience.
      • Intentions are influenced by attitudes toward the behavior, subjective norms and perceptions of behavioral control.
      • The basic mechanism is subsequently extended by an abductive reasoning system which is guided by subjective probability.
      • In this sense their condition is epistemologically objective but ontologically subjective.
      • Drama is a genre which is heavily oriented to the first person present, a narrative form associated with subjective experience and inner feelings.
      • Consciousness is commensurate with being; all existence has a subjective aspect.
      • Things are even more difficult when probabilities are subjective and individual beliefs may differ.
      • In concrete terms it poses difficulties - because it also makes Theism subjective.
      • There is a difference between my existence and the existence of a chair, which is that my existence has this subjective side - or, as you might say, inside.
      • That is, reported differences in perceived stress may be due to differences in subjective perceptions or in differences in the amount of objective stressors.
      • You can follow the software instructions to adjust your computer screen controls manually, but as you can guess, human perception is usually subjective.
      • As Beckett dramatizes, the ultimate reality of the subjective mind is beyond the spatio-temporal limits of logical meaning.
      • A lot of magic and NLP plays in this area of the individual's subjective experience.
      • The scientific literature has noted some gender differences in both subjective and objective responses to cocaine.
      • One of the few good ideas about consciousness that has gained some measure of agreement is that subjective feelings depend very much on the kind of body you have.
      • How do physical processes in the brain give rise to the subjective life the conscious mind?
  • 2Grammar
    Relating to or denoting a case of nouns and pronouns used for the subject of a sentence.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • The genitive would function syntactically as subjective genitive with the transactional term o-pa.
nounsəbˈjektivsəbˈdʒɛktɪv
the subjectiveGrammar
  • The subjective case.

Origin

Late Middle English (originally in the sense ‘characteristic of a political subject, submissive’): from Latin subjectivus, from subject- ‘brought under’ (see subject).

 
 
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更新时间:2024/12/23 17:27:09