0 an activity that you spend time doing, usually when you are not working -- 嗜好,消遣,娱乐
1 the act of following someone or something to try to catch him, her, or it -- 追踪;追击
2 the act of trying to achieve a plan, activity, or situation, usually over a long period of time -- 追求;从事;实行
As development advances, it will naturally intersect to an increasing degree with efforts in the pursuit of 'virtual reality'.
Such creatures would be ' perfectly reasonable ' in the sense that they could never be weak-willed in their pursuit of the good.
They were thus incompatible with politeness, which was allied with the metropolitan and cosmopolitan and the pursuit of a general culture.
Realists emphasize new or continuing security concerns, and prescribe unilateral action and the deployment of traditional power politics in the pursuit of state interests.
Unlike nursing, for example, career structures for doctors have long supported the simultaneous pursuit of academic research activity alongside practice.
Stability is not only hard to g rasp, its pursuit is self-defeating.
They are not afraid to risk ridicule in the pursuit of true representation.
Certainly both are ruthless in pursuit of their agendas.