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DataPoint    音标拼音: [d'etəp'ɔɪnt] [d'ætəp'ɔɪnt]

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英文字典中文字典相关资料:


  • word choice: data points or datapoints? - English Language Usage . . .
    Even in JSTOR (an academic database), "datapoint" appears 584 times to "data point"'s 22,876 times So while data point is much more common, both are attested, so the choice comes down to individual or publication preference
  • Point [s] of datum vs. point [s] of data - English Language Usage . . .
    The only phrasing that I've ever heard "is "data point" and it's my job to work with data Even that phrase is extremely rate; the commonly used terms are "observation" and "record" Back to your question: "point of datum" is a redundancy, because a datum is a synonym for a data point, so "I am but a point of data" is the correct phrase
  • Use of as instead of because - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    As one datapoint, one of my co-authors, who is from the West Coast, cannot use as causatively at all, and always rewrites my stuff to use because In contrast, in my own family from the Inland North, it is part of our normal English, and has been demonstrated extemporaneously in more than one speaker The West Coaster simply said, "Sounds too British to me "
  • I (ll) bet: optionality of will - English Language Usage Stack . . .
    I bet (you) can be used in an informal style to mean ‘I think it’s probable that' I'll bet is also possible and, in an informal style, present verbs are often used with future meanings after I bet
  • Antiviral vs Anti-Viral - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    No, hyphens occur in 1929, 1987 and 2001, and examples without in 1934, 1994 and 2001 Seems to be spread evenly throughout history, probably at something like the distribution ratio in David's answer, and probably a stylistic choice in each publication It was just another datapoint for your survey
  • meaning - Does a fact have to be true? - English Language Usage . . .
    Specify some repeatable observable phenomenon O Here O is a time-series comprised of (A) a child eating food with artificial colors, and (B) a child's behavior after doing so Specify some operationalized measurement m of the degree to which X is true for a given observable datapoint o
  • What about you? versus How about you? - English Language Usage . . .
    From my point of view, if the difference between what about and how about in general is slight, the difference between what about you and how about you is even slighter They are certainly interchangeable, as you mentioned, but I would go so far as to say that their common usages are semantically indistinguishable In point of usage, Ngrams shows a slight preference for What about you: COCA
  • If pre is previous, post is after, what is current?
    We were discussing something like pre-boss era, post-boss era What word describes the era where the boss is still there?
  • grammar - Other ways of saying except for one - English Language . . .
    For example in the sentence All datapoints, except for one, lie on a line to me (not a native English speaker), the "except for one" part sounds too heavy Are there other, lighter ways of sayin
  • Why in Britain were the police called rozzers?
    I've just watched all six episodes of the BBC historical drama "The Trial of Christine Keeler" It was marvellous for the way it presented London life of the 1960s - the lovely old cars, the suave





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