0 to be familiar with, and have knowledge or experience of the facts or rules of something -- 对…熟悉,对…精通
Wilson's preference was for an inclusive and eminently achievable architecture, intellectually conversant with broader post-modernist commentaries while remaining committed to modern architecture as an evolving project.
Tanaka sees technology as external and with a sense of independent conversant personhood.
We need to be more conversant with the dynamic exercise of, interaction of, and communicative import of feelings.
Western researchers and consultants (often not conversant in the local language) may then find such terms being translated back to them.
First, architectural history must become more conversant with the analytic techniques of art history.
Here again the account is eminently readable yet clearly conversant with pertinent theoretical issues.
Most of the authors, unfortunately, do not appear to be all that conversant with writings on globalisation and transnationalism in the last decade or so.
The involvement of musicians in a plethora of musical genres and cultures leads to the conclusion that musicians need to be conversant in multiple musical genres.