unproblematically造句
例句與造句
- Geopolitical practice is not, therefore, unproblematically'right'or'natural '.
- The choice to integrate multimodal forms in the classroom is not accepted unproblematically by everyone in educational communities.
- Potter, 29, " adapts unproblematically to quite different musical situations without losing any of his identity, " the prize committee said.
- A font licensed for use in publishing should be unproblematically used here, as long as we don't include the " source-code " of the font, but only pictures of it.
- From my vantage point of thinking about the queer-boy-child-stars grown up, the point of provocation for me draws from the simple fact that Michael and Ricky both are NOT unproblematically heterosexual.
- It's difficult to find unproblematically in a sentence. 用unproblematically造句挺難的
- Whereas there may unproblematically be recognised many different " necessary " conditions of the event's occurrence, no two distinct events may lay claim to be sufficient conditions, since this would lead to overdetermination.
- The British criminologist Yvonne Jewkes has also raised issue with the term'morality', how it is accepted unproblematically in the concept of'moral panic'and how most research into moral panics fails to approach the term critically but instead accepts it at face value.
- Such arguments typically claim that the relationship between a particular and its form is very intelligible and easily grasped; that people unproblematically apply Platonic theory in everyday life; and that the inherence criticism is only created by the artificial demand to explain the normal understanding of inherence as if it were highly problematic.
- But although " Notting Hill " is more conventional and its eccentricity has been toned down, Curtis still gives us the impression that he's drawing us into a longtime circle of London pals and in a neighborhood so unproblematically diverse that it becomes part of the film's fairy-tale world.
- David Shepherd Nivison, in " The Cambridge History of Ancient China ", writes that the moral goods of Mohism " are interrelated : more basic wealth, then more reproduction; more people, then more production and wealth . . . if people have plenty, they would be good, filial, kind, and so on unproblematically ."
- When Riesman, no humorist, addressed Bohemianism, he saw it as just another sort of other-directedness, made up of people who are " often zealously tuned in to the signals of a group that finds the meaning of life, quite unproblematically, in an illusion of attacking an allegedly dominant and punishing majority of Babbitts and Kwakiutl chiefs ."
- The " material wealth " of Mohist consequentialism refers to David Shepherd Nivison, in the " The Cambridge History of Ancient China ", writes that the moral goods of Mohism " are interrelated : more basic wealth, then more reproduction; more people, then more production and wealth . . . if people have plenty, they would be good, filial, kind, and so on unproblematically ."
- Margaret Conkey and Janet Spector s 1984 paper Archaeology and the Study of Gender summed up the feminist critique of the discipline at that time : that archaeologists were unproblematically overlaying modern-day, Western gender norms onto past societies, for example in the sexual division of labor; that contexts and artifacts attributed to the activities of men, such as projectile point production and butchering at kill sites, were prioritized in research time and funding; and that the very character of the discipline was constructed around masculine values and norms.
- Reflecting back on this phenomenon in 2004, Maria Bucur wrote : " the perverse image of Antonescu is not the product of a propaganda campaign led by right-wing extremists, but a pervasive myth fed by historical debates and political contests, and which the public seems indifferent to or accepts unproblematically . " After the Revolution, archival sources concerning Antonescu, including those in the National Archives of Romania, were made more available to researchers, but documents confiscated or compiled by Soviet officials, kept in Russia, remained largely inaccessible.
- This pairing possibly stems from Boston; the : Category : Squares in Boston page defines a square as a major intersection, usually with many street approaches . The parent article to this category, Town square, notes that this definition is applied in some cities, especially in New England in the U . S . Making these CfDs only about Vancouver obscures the underlying assumption that " Category : Streets and squares " can be applied unproblematically to anywhere that has one or more places resembling or being called a square.