0 the fact that people are made to follow rules in a very severe way -- 严厉;严格;苛严
1 the quality of being detailed, careful, and complete -- 严密;缜密;严谨
Her arguments lacked intellectual rigour. 她的论点不够理智和严谨。
In other words, whilst academic rigour is important, the research needs to reflect the complex and messy nature of primary care.
The most salient feature of this model is its linguistic rigour, that guarantees neither over-acceptance nor over-generation.
Another confounding factor is the lack of rigour in assaying the endpoint of maturation - the production of a fertilizable egg.
This provides an accessible route into the subject for students and engineers lacking a strong mathematical background, without compromising on rigour.
However, in frailer patients, the rigour of the assessment will depend on compliance with tests, overall prognosis and, most importantly, patient and family wishes.
He manages to present a memoir with popular appeal and scholarly rigour.
There is a seriousness and intellectual rigour about these two volumes, weighing up arguments and charting the course of historical debates.
A minimum of rigour, however, was maintained following the best practice of descriptive anthropological/ ethnographic studies.