释义 |
gra·di·ent I. \ˈgrādēənt\ noun (-s) Etymology: Latin gradient-, gradiens (influenced in meaning by English grade) (I), present participle of gradi to step, go — more at grade 1. a. : the inclination or the rate of regular or graded ascent or descent (as of a slope, roadway, or pipeline) b. : a part (as of a road or pipeline) that slopes upward or downward : a portion of a way that is not level : slope, grade, ramp 2. : change in the value of a quantity (as temperature, pressure, or intensity of sound) per unit distance in a specified direction < vertical temperature gradient > < electric potential gradient along a wire > 3. : the vector sum of the partial derivatives with respect to the three coordinate variables x, y, z of a scalar quantity whose value varies from point to point 4. a. : a graded difference in reactive capacity and metabolic activity along an embryonic axis or the radius of an embryonic field that constitutes a major effective agent in the organization of embryonic tissues and in the localization and differentiation of definitive structures and organs b. : a graded difference in physiological activity especially along the primary axis of the body II. adjective : being a gradient < a gradient section of the road > : constituting a gradient < show definite gradient tendency — a tendency for the rate of delinquency and crime to decrease from the center outward — W.C.Reckless > |