0 If a surface reflects light, heat, sound, or an image, it sends the light, etc. back and does not absorb it: --
1 to show, express, or be a sign of something: --
The statistics reflect a change in people's spending habits.
2 to think carefully, especially about possibilities and opinions: --
3 to send back light, heat, energy, or sound from a surface: --
Anthropologists are trained in distinctive ways to perceive and reflect on the human dynamics of meaningmaking.
Moreover, in many cases, the rejection rates based on finite-sample critical values increase substantially, reflecting the convergence of asymptotic and finite-sample critical values.
The log(likelihood) is substantially worse, reflecting the large sample size in the simulation.
Interestingly, the above study, although discusses course content in detail, does reflect the evaluations from perceived student's needs.
If his wife did these things, it reflected well on the man.
The themes reflect the research interests of the various authors.
The theoretical debate has moved beyond the subject of interpretation of the past, to the necessity to reflect on archaeology itself.
More policies that reflect systems thinking are needed.