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 relevance ['rɛləvəns]   添加此单词到默认生词本
n. 重大意义, 适当, 有关

[计] 关联性

[经] 中肯, 恰当, 关联




    relevance
    [ noun ]
    the relation of something to the matter at hand
    <noun.linkdef>


    Relevance \Rel"e*vance\ (r?l"?*vans), Relevancy \Rel"e*van*cy\
    (-van*s?), n.
    1. The quality or state of being relevant; pertinency;
    applicability.

    Its answer little meaning, little relevancy bore.
    --Poe.

    2. (Scots Law) Sufficiency to infer the conclusion.

    1. Race had no statistical relevance as a factor in people reporting arthritis.
    2. It does not try to explain the relevance of this to the voters of modern California. Her latest refined commercial pitch is to depict Mr Huffington as 'the Texas millionaire California can't trust'.
    3. Compared with your self-wringing variety, real sufferers do not make eloquent speeches about the ironic relevance of their personal misery to larger questions of social policy (if they're black) or the meaning of existence (if they're white).
    4. It's done in a verifiable way, with relevance in terms of our desire to get the conventional forces in balance, have relevance in terms of banning chemical and biological weapons.
    5. It's done in a verifiable way, with relevance in terms of our desire to get the conventional forces in balance, have relevance in terms of banning chemical and biological weapons.
    6. 'Much of the information is poorly targeted and of little relevance to the recipient,' said Mr Young. In spite of the elevation in the role of the memo, less than half the respondents thought it an effective way of communication.
    7. This makes them the focus of intense contention among political and financial interests. Of most relevance to the ruling party is the fact that mayors also oversee the administration of elections. The KMT holds 13 mayorships.
    8. The poor use of property assets in many businesses does little credit to the breadth and relevance of surveyors' advice.
    9. The line has to be drawn somewhere." The Soviet government regrets the labor unrest in Poland but denies it has any relevance to Soviet economic reforms, a Foreign Ministry spokesman said today.
    10. He says the guard was getting other calls about a meeting that morning too, something "that could have relevance."
    11. Our Fokine inheritance - and, for that matter, the Massine repertory - has continuing relevance and importance for dancers and audiences, and the Royal Ballet possesses authentic stagings of masterpieces which it has a duty to show.
    12. The syndicate's Lee Salem told us he "couldn't see the relevance."
    13. The government's proposed order would have nine categories of classified information that should not be revealed at trial before prosecutors have had an opportunity to contest its relevance.
    14. Even blue-chip British Land, launching a debenture in the spring, managed to keep its appetite for cash to Pounds 200m. Thai new issues may seem of limited relevance to the average British investor.
    15. Yet the relevance of southern China for Russia is limited.
    16. But it has one over-riding disadvantage: the risk that tables gradually drift, over time, away from the relevance. Individual tables are introduced to meet new needs, but their contents are rarely revised as those needs change.
    17. But to Moon Landrieu, the former New Orleans mayor who helped build that city's cavernous, money-losing Superdome, questions of who benefits or the bottom line are of little relevance.
    18. The relevance of these issues and Theodore Roosevelt's evenhanded discussion of them oblige interested students of war to read the book, and historians to copy it.
    19. This gives the book a better shot at longevity, but a smaller claim to relevance.
    20. Unfortunately, it doesn't have much relevance to today's world.
    21. It would be gratifying if this were because the money movers have seen the limited relevance of an economy which accounts for barely 3 per cent of global output.
    22. But the truth is likely to lie somewhere in the middle, with the Stewart-Keiser study having more than a modicum of relevance for both the Bavarians and the Brits.
    23. "The Iacoccas succeeded in the old world of hierarchy, authority, and control, which has less relevance today." According to Ms. Rubin, "The new hot button is no longer `entrepreneur' or `executive' but `change agent.'
    24. The captain's refusal to answer charges in Q's star chamber may have relevance for Trekkers mercilessly judging the new show against the old.
    25. "I think it is totally inappropriate for the U.S. Catholic Conference to be cooperating with government agencies in the collection of data that they know has no relevance to the physical safety of the pope," Ms. Kissling said.
    26. But the wider and more significant debate, over the real purpose and relevance of German supervisory boards, is only just beginning. Nor is it a new one.
    27. It may be that Miss Snaith has restricted her movement choices in order to stress the absurdist relevance of her piece as slowly-shifting minimalism.
    28. The piece contains an extraordinary scene where the sister declares her incestuous love for her brother; it is not unmoving, but of dubious relevance to the plot.
    29. He also questioned the relevance of the furlough issue in presidential politics.
    30. This history does not lack relevance to the efforts by Mr. Bush and Mr. Gorbachev to find a common ground in dealing with Saddam Hussein.
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