These are word's examples related to subject. Click on any word to go to its word's detail page. Or, 更多关于subject的信息
Books on every conceivable subject lined one wall.
The school offers courses in every subject imaginable.
She's got some very interesting things to say on the subject.
'Clare' is the subject of the sentence 'Clare drank all the milk'.
The word permitted a nonscientific psychological preoccupation to reappear as the subject of scientific experiment.
The verbal gerund, by contrast, can combine with adverbs, auxiliaries, ordinary objects, and common-case subjects.
Aquatic organic matter is subject to a hard-water error and is therefore not usable.
To test the role of purely spatial global properties, the luminance distribution in each image was subjected to a spatial-frequency analysis.
The literature on this subject could have been strengthened by recent high-profile publications.
The order of the assessments (medical and psychological) was randomly assigned within each subject group.
In several instances, he returns to subjects treated earlier in the book, such as children's education and the evolution from scrolls to codices.
Only nine subjects actively refused to participate in the study; the others were lost to follow-up or failed to return the consent form.
These were replaced by the next highest reading time for that subject in that condition and at that position.
Correspondingly, adult subjects do not favor the correct parabolic trajectory over other paths.
In both of these situations, social subjects enact authentication by historicizing their identities through claims of linguistic continuity with a valued past.
Among the subjects who were depressed in the initial interview, 34% had recovered, 39% were depressed and 27% were dead.
Their only pleasures are drink and tobacco, the former being subjected to temperance campaigns to remove even this form of recreation from the workers' lives.
The same pronoun is used for both masculine and feminine individuals and for subject and object case roles.
Such regularities in conversations are the subject matter of sociolinguistics - the study of how social settings and roles influence language use.