0 the leather straps etc by which a horse is attached to a cart etc which it is pulling and by means of which it is controlled. -- บังเหียน
1 to put the harness on (a horse). -- ใส่บังเหียน
2 to make use of (a source of power, eg a river) for some purpose, eg to produce electricity or to drive machinery -- นำมาใช้
The prospect of holding public office successfully harnessed private ambition to party legitimation and swelled the ranks of the partisan labour force.
The first pertains to the development of interventions that effectively harness empirically identified protective processes.
The recent surge of interest in harnessing computers for teaching suprasegmentals has lead to the development of a number of programmes.
Potentially, harnessing temporal logic offers much more than this in modelling the argumentation process.
A harness is a context with a single hole that is enclosed only within parallel compositions, restrictions and ambients.
Instead of attempting to eliminate emergent phenomena, it could be interesting to explore how this might be deliberately achieved and harnessed.
While some seemed to have discarded it, others harnessed it for their own benefit.
In 1933 the association of directory publishers was taken over and the information and advertising industries were harnessed to the interests of the state.
中文繁体
輓具, 繫帶, 給(馬)上輓具…
More中文简体
挽具, 系带, 给(马)上挽具…
MoreEspañol
arnés, poner el arnés a, enjaezar…
MorePortuguês
arreio, arnês, arrear…
MoreTürk dili
koşum takımı, kayış, emniyet kayışı/bağı…
MoreFrançais
harnais [masculine], exploiter, harnacher…
MoreČeština
postroj, okšírovat, využít…
MoreDansk
seletøj, spænde for, udnytte…
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