goal [ gəul] n.球门;得分;目的
goal [gəul] n.(足球)球门,目标
实现小康目标 to achieve the goal of ensuring our people a relative comfortable life
乌龙球 own goal
field goal percentage 投球命中率
field goal 投球命中
goals 总目标
We should do our best to achieve our goal in life.
我们应尽全力去达成我们的人生目标。
organizational goals 组织目标
strategic goals 战略目标
In science, the total absorption of the individual event in the generalization is the goal; on the other hand, the humanities are concerned rather with providing for the special meaning of the individual event within an appropriate general system.
自然科学以在归纳中全部吸收个别情况为目标,人文科学则更关心在适当的一般性体系之内提供个别情况的特殊意义。
The goal is to recycle 98 percent of household waste.
目标是使98%的家庭废物得到再利用。
We should do our best to accomplish the goal.
我们应尽力实现这一目标。
We should do our best to accomplish the goal.
我们应该努力实现这一目标。
His ultimate goal at the moment is to go and study out of the country.
他眼下最大的目标是出国留学。
The most spectacular goal of the match was scored by Harris.
比赛中最精彩的进球是哈里斯的射门。
What's your goal in life 你的人生目标是什么?
If they were right in thinking that the next necessity in human progress was to lift the average person upon an intellectual and social level with the most favored, they stood at least three generations nearer than Europe to that goal.
如果他们认为人类进步的下一步必需是把普通人的智力水平和社会地位向着最受欢迎的方向提高的看法正确的话,他们至少要比欧洲超前三代接近那个目标。
He kicked a penalty goal in the football match.
在这场足球赛中,他主罚,踢进了一个球。
A What a match! That was an incredible game.
A 多么精彩的比赛!这是一场令人难以置信的比赛。
B Yes, it was amazing. At least I thought the first half was amazing.
B 是的,令人惊叹。至少我认为上半场非常精彩。
A Did you see that last goal? What a header!
A 你看到最后的进球了吗?多么漂亮的头球攻门!
B Maybe it was a bit lucky. The second half wasn’t so good.
B 也许有点幸运。下半场就没有那么好。
A I thought the match was really exciting.
A 我认为比赛非常精彩。
B Yes, it was good.
B 是的,很不错。
Happiness is not a goal, it is a by--product.
Mrs. Eleanor Roosevelt, American president's wife
幸福不是目的,而是一种副产品。
美国总统罗斯福的夫人埃莉诺
Optimists always picture themselves accomplishing their goals.
Lucius Anaeus Seneca, Ancient Roman philosopher
乐观主义者总是想象自己实现了目标的情景。
古罗马哲学家西尼加L A
- be asleep at the switch 玩忽职守
The goal-keeper was asleep at the switch and let the rival team goal at the last minute.
目标 target; cause; end; goal; object; objective; tee; aim
罢休 [bà xiū] /give up/abandon (a goal, etc)/let it go/forget it/let matter drop/
不到黄河心不死 [bù dào huáng hé xīn bù sǐ] /not stop until one reaches the Huanghe River - not stop until one reaches one's goal/refuse to give up until all hope is gone/
超产 [chāo chǎn] /(v) exceed a production goal/
大功告成 [dà gōng gào chéng] /successfully accomplished (project or goal)/to be highly successful/
篮 [lán] /basket/goal/
目 [mù] /eye/item/section/list/catalogue/table of contents/order (taxonomy)/goal/name/title/
目标 [mù biāo] /target/goal/objective/
目的 [mù dì] /purpose/aim/goal/target/objective/
心愿 [xīn yuàn] /(n) goal; desire/
雄心 [xióng xīn] /(n) great goals; large aspirations/
用意 [yòng yì] /(n) purpose; intention; goal/
壮志 [zhuàng zhì] /(adj) great goal; magnificent aspiration/
追求 [zhuī qiú] /seek/pursue (a goal, etc)/
着眼 [zhuó yǎn] /have one's eyes on (a goal)/have something in mind/
宗旨 [zōng zhǐ] /(n) objective; aim; goal/
But if robots are to reach the next stage of laborsaving utility, they will have to operate with less human supervision and be able to make at least a few decisions for themselves — goals that pose a real challenge.
但是如果机器人要进入节省劳力的下一个阶段,他们必须能够在更少的人工监控下运行,并且至少能够独立地做一些决定。这些目标给我们提出了一个真正的挑战。
Rumor has it that more than 20 books on creationism/evolution are in the publisher's pipelines.
有传言说,有20多本关于创世纪论与进化论之争的书即将出版,
A few have already appeared.
有几本已经面世了。
The goal of all will be to try to explain to a confused and often unenlightened citizenry that there are not two equally valid scientific theories for the origin and evolution of universe and life.
所有这些书的目的是试图告诉那些迷糊而且常常是还不开通的芸芸众生:就宇宙和生命的起源与发展问题而言,不可能存在两种都成立的科学理论。
Innovation is like soccer; even the best players miss the goal and have their shots blocked much more frequently than they score.
创新就像踢足球,即使是最出色的球员也会痛失进球机会,其射门被挡出的机会大大多于进球的机会。
The point is that the players who score most are the ones who take the most shots at the goal — and so it goes with innovation in any field of activity.
问题在于得分最多者正是那些射门次数最多的球员,而任何领域的创新活动都是如此。
{adj: attainable, come-at-able} capable of being attained or accomplished
"choose an attainable goal"
"art is not something that is come-at-able by dint of study"
{adj: backhanded} roundabout or ambiguous
"attacks from that source amounted to a backhanded compliment to his integrity"
"a backhanded and dishonest way of reaching his goal"
{adj: businesslike, earnest} not distracted by anything unrelated to the goal
{adj: counterproductive} tending to hinder the achievement of a goal
{adj: directed} (often used in combination) having a specified direction
"a positively directed vector"
"goal-directed"
{adj: directional} relating to direction toward a (nonspatial) goal
"he tried to explain the directional trends of modern science"
{adj: do-nothing} characterized by inability or unwillingness to work toward a goal or assume responsibility
"a do-nothing government"
{adj: farseeing, farsighted, foresighted, foresightful, prospicient, long, longsighted} planning prudently for the future
"large goals that required farsighted policies"
"took a long view of the geopolitical issues"
{adj: flying} done swiftly in or as if in the air; used e.g. of a racing start in which runners are already in motion as they cross the starting line
"a flying start"
"crossed the goal line with a flying leap"
{adj: goal-directed, purposive} having a purpose
"purposive behavior"
{adj: illusive, illusory} based on or having the nature of an illusion
"illusive hopes of finding a better job"
"Secret activities offer presidents the alluring but often illusory promise that they can achieve foreign policy goals without the bothersome debate and open decision that are staples of democracy"
{adj: long-range} involving an extended span of time
"long-range goals"
{adj: ostensible, ostensive} represented or appearing as such; pretended
"His ostensible purpose was charity, his real goal popularity"
{adj: primary} of first rank or importance or value; direct and immediate rather than secondhand
"primary goals"
"a primary effect"
"primary sources"
"a primary interest"
<-> secondary
{adj: proximate} closest in degree or order (space or time) especially in a chain of causes and effects
"news of his proximate arrival"
"interest in proximate rather than ultimate goals"
<-> ultimate
{adj: purposeful} serving as or indicating the existence of a purpose or goal
<-> purposeless
{adj: purposeless} not evidencing any purpose or goal
<-> purposeful
{adj: ultimate} furthest or highest in degree or order; utmost or extreme
"the ultimate achievement"
"the ultimate question"
"man's ultimate destiny"
"the ultimate insult"
"one's ultimate goal in life"
<-> proximate
{adj: unachievable, unattainable, undoable, unrealizable} impossible to achieve
"an unattainablels adj.pert goal"
{adj: unoriented} not having position or goal definitely set or ascertained
"engaged in unoriented study"
"unoriented until she looked at the map"
<-> oriented
{adj: zero} having no measurable or otherwise determinable value
"the goal is zero population growth"
{adv: all the way, the whole way} to the goal
"she climbed the mountain all the way"
{adv: ambitiously, determinedly, with ambition} in an ambitious and energetic manner
"she pursued her goals ambitiously"
<-> unambitiously
{adv: deservedly} as deserved
"he chalked up two goals which deservedly gave Bolton their second victory of the season"
<-> undeservedly
{adv: endlessly, ceaselessly, incessantly, unceasingly, unendingly, continuously} with unflagging resolve
"dance inspires him ceaselessly to strive higher and higher toward the shining pinnacle of perfection that is the goal of every artiste"
{adv: mutually, reciprocally} in a mutual or shared manner
"the agreement was mutually satisfactory"
"the goals of the negotiators were not reciprocally exclusive"
{adv: short} at some point or distance before a goal is reached
"he fell short of our expectations"
{adv: symbolically} in a symbolic manner
"symbolically accepted goals"
{n: American football, American football game} a game played by two teams of 11 players on a rectangular field 100 yards long; teams try to get possession of the ball and advance it across the opponents goal line in a series of (running or passing) plays
{n: Aum Shinrikyo, Aum, Supreme Truth} a terrorist organization whose goal is to take over Japan and then the world; based on a religion founded in 1987 that combines elements of Buddhism with Christianity
"in 1995 Aum members released deadly sarin gas on a Tokyo subway train"
{n: Boy Scouts} an international (but decentralized) movement started in 1908 in England with the goal of teaching good citizenship to boys
{n: Caliphate} the era of Islam's ascendancy from the death of Mohammed until the 13th century; some Moslems still maintain that the Moslem world must always have a calif as head of the community
"their goal was to reestablish the Caliphate"
{n: Celestial City, City of God, Heavenly City, Holy City} phrases used to refer to Heaven
"the Celestial City was Christian's goal in Bunyan's `Pilgrim's Progress'"
{n: Democratic Front for the Liberation of Palestine, DFLP, Popular Democratic Front for the Liberation of Palestine, PDFLP} a Marxist-Leninist group that believes Palestinian goals can only be achieved by revolutionary change
"in 1974 the DFLP took over a schoolhouse and massacred Israeli schoolchildren"
{n: Drug Enforcement Administration, Drug Enforcement Agency, DEA} federal agency responsible for enforcing laws and regulations governing narcotics and controlled substances; goal is to immobilize drug trafficking organizations
{n: Islamic Army of Aden, IAA, Islamic Army of Aden-Abyan, Aden-Abyan Islamic Army} Yemen-based terrorist group that supports al-Qaeda's goals; seeks to overthrow the Yemeni government and eliminate United States interests; responsible for bombings and kidnappings and killing Western tourists in Yemen
{n: Lashkar-e-Taiba, Lashkar-e-Toiba, Lashkar-e-Tayyiba, LET, Army of the Pure, Army of the Righteous} the most brutal terrorist group active in Kashmir; fights against India with the goal of restoring Islamic rule of India
"Lashkar-e-Toiba has committed mass murders of civilian Hindus"
{n: Mercury program} a program of rocket-powered flights undertaken by US between 1961 and 1963 with the goal of putting a man in orbit around the earth
"under the Mercury program each flight had one astronaut"
{n: Promised Land} the goal towards which Christians strive
{n: activism} a policy of taking direct and militant action to achieve a political or social goal
{n: aim, object, objective, target} the goal intended to be attained (and which is believed to be attainable)
"the sole object of her trip was to see her children"
{n: al-Tawhid, Al Tawhid, Divine Unity} an Islamic terrorist cell that originated in Jordan but operates in Germany; goal is to attack Europe and Russia with chemical weapons
{n: bar} an obstruction (usually metal) placed at the top of a goal
"it was an excellent kick but the ball hit the bar"
{n: basket, field goal} a score in basketball made by throwing the ball through the hoop
{n: bell ringer, bull's eye, mark, home run} something that exactly succeeds in achieving its goal
"the new advertising campaign was a bell ringer"
"scored a bull's eye"
"hit the mark"
"the president's speech was a home run"
{n: biofeedback} a training program in which a person is given information about physiological processes (heart rate or blood pressure) that is not normally available with the goal of gaining conscious control of them
{n: bourn, bourne} an archaic term for a goal or destination
{n: cage} the net that is the goal in ice hockey
{n: campaign, military campaign} several related operations aimed at achieving a particular goal (usually within geographical and temporal constraints)
{n: collaborator, cooperator, partner, pardner} an associate who works with others toward a common goal
"the musician and the librettist were collaborators"
{n: collision} a conflict of opposed ideas or attitudes or goals
"a collision of interests"
{n: community, community of interests} agreement as to goals
"the preachers and the bootleggers found they had a community of interests"
{n: consecration} a solemn commitment of your life or your time to some cherished purpose (to a service or a goal)
"his consecration to study"
{n: corner kick} a free kick from the corner awarded to the other side when a player has sent the ball behind his own goal line
{n: cultural movement} a group of people working together to advance certain cultural goals
{n: dedication} a ceremony in which something (as a building) is dedicated to some goal or purpose
{n: destination, terminus} the ultimate goal for which something is done
{n: directness, straightness} trueness of course toward a goal
"rivaling a hawk in directness of aim"
<-> indirectness
{n: diversion, deviation, digression, deflection, deflexion, divagation} a turning aside (of your course or attention or concern)
"a diversion from the main highway"
"a digression into irrelevant details"
"a deflection from his goal"
{n: dropkick} (football) kicking (as for a field goal) in which the football is dropped and kicked as it touches the ground
{n: end-all} the ultimate goal
"human beings are not the end-all of evolution"
{n: enosis} the union of Greece and Cyprus (which is the goal of a group of Greek Cypriots)
{n: fast track} a rapid means of achieving a goal
"they saw independence as the fast track to democracy"
"he took a fast track to the top of the corporate ladder"
"the company went off the fast track when the stock market dropped"
{n: field goal} a score in American football; a score made by kicking the ball between the opponents' goal posts
{n: finish, destination, goal} the place designated as the end (as of a race or journey)
"a crowd assembled at the finish"
"he was nearly exhausted as their destination came into view"
{n: football, football game} any of various games played with a ball (round or oval) in which two teams try to kick or carry or propel the ball into each other's goal
{n: frustration, defeat} the feeling that accompanies an experience of being thwarted in attaining your goals
{n: goal line} a line marking each end of the playing field or pitch; where the goals stand
{n: goal, end} the state of affairs that a plan is intended to achieve and that (when achieved) terminates behavior intended to achieve it
"the ends justify the means"
{n: goal-kick} (association football) a kick by the defending side after the attacking side sends the ball over the goal-line
{n: goal-kick} (rugby) an attempt to kick a goal
{n: goalkeeper, goalie, goaltender, netkeeper, netminder} the soccer or hockey player assigned to protect the goal
{n: goalkeeper, goalie, goaltender, netkeeper} the defensive position on an ice hockey or soccer or lacrosse team who stands in front of the goal and tries to prevent opposing players from scoring
{n: goalmouth} (sports) the area immediately in front of the goal
{n: goalpost} one of a pair of posts (usually joined by a crossbar) that are set up as a goal at each end of a playing field
{n: goal} a successful attempt at scoring
"the winning goal came with less than a minute left to play"
{n: goal} game equipment consisting of the place toward which players of a game try to advance a ball or puck in order to score points
{n: going, sledding} advancing toward a goal
"persuading him was easy going"
"the proposal faces tough sledding"
{n: hypothetical imperative} a principle stating the action required to attain a desired goal
{n: ice hockey, hockey, hockey game} a game played on an ice rink by two opposing teams of six skaters each who try to knock a flat round puck into the opponents' goal with angled sticks
{n: icing, icing the puck} (ice hockey) the act of shooting the puck from within your own defensive area the length of the rink beyond the opponent's goal
{n: incentive option, incentive stock option} an option granted to corporate executives if the company achieves certain financial goals
{n: indirectness} having the characteristic of lacking a true course toward a goal
<-> directness
{n: intention} (usually plural) the goal with respect to a marriage proposal
"his intentions are entirely honorable"
{n: jihad, jehad} a holy struggle or striving by a Muslim for a moral or spiritual or political goal
{n: lacrosse} a game invented by American Indians; now played by two teams who use long-handled rackets to catch and carry and throw the ball toward the opponents' goal
{n: machine} an intricate organization that accomplishes its goals efficiently
"the war machine"
{n: measure, step} any maneuver made as part of progress toward a goal
"the situation called for strong measures"
"the police took steps to reduce crime"
{n: motivation, motive, need} the psychological feature that arouses an organism to action toward a desired goal; the reason for the action; that which gives purpose and direction to behavior
"we did not understand his motivation"
"he acted with the best of motives"
{n: movement, social movement, front} a group of people with a common ideology who try together to achieve certain general goals
"he was a charter member of the movement"
"politicians have to respect a mass movement"
"he led the national liberation front"
{n: nationalism} the doctrine that nations should act independently (rather than collectively) to attain their goals
<-> internationalism
{n: net} a goal lined with netting (as in soccer or hockey)
{n: no-goal} a nonexistent goal
"he lived without a reason progressing toward no-goal"
{n: nonaccomplishment, nonachievement} an act that does not achieve its intended goal
{n: nonproliferation, non-proliferation} the prevention of something increasing or spreading (especially the prevention of an increase in the number of countries possessing nuclear weapons)
"they protested that the nonproliferation treaty was just a plot to maintain the hegemony of those who already had nuclear weapons"
"nuclear disarmament and nonproliferation are closely related goals"
<-> proliferation
{n: overkill} any effort that seems to go farther than would be necessary to achieve its goal
{n: own goal} (soccer) a goal that results when a player inadvertently knocks the ball into the goal he is defending
"the own goal cost them the game"
{n: partnership} a cooperative relationship between people or groups who agree to share responsibility for achieving some specific goal
"effective language learning is a partnership between school, teacher and student"
"the action teams worked in partnership with the government"
{n: place-kicker, placekicker} (football) a kicker who makes a place kick for a goal
{n: plan, program, programme} a series of steps to be carried out or goals to be accomplished
"they drew up a six-step plan"
"they discussed plans for a new bond issue"
{n: political movement} a group of people working together to achieve a political goal
{n: possession} (sport) the act of controlling the ball (or puck)
"they took possession of the ball on their own goal line"
{n: post, stake} a pole or stake set up to mark something (as the start or end of a race track)
"a pair of posts marked the goal"
"the corner of the lot was indicated by a stake"
{n: progress, progression, procession, advance, advancement, forward motion, onward motion} the act of moving forward toward a goal
{n: pursuer} a person who pursues some plan or goal
"a pursuer of truth"
{n: pushball} a game using a leather ball six feet in diameter; the two side try to push it across the opponents' goal
{n: repression} the act of repressing; control by holding down
"his goal was the repression of insolence"
{n: safety} a score in American football; a player is tackled behind his own goal line
{n: sales incentive} remuneration offered to a salesperson for exceeding some predetermined sales goal
{n: scrimmage line, line of scrimmage} line parallel to the goal lines where football linesmen line up at the start of each play in American football
"the runner was tackled at the line of scrimmage"
{n: self-knowledge} an understanding of yourself and your goals and abilities
{n: shooter} (sports) a player who drives or kicks a ball at the goal (or a basketball player who shoots at the basket)
{n: soccer, association football} a football game in which two teams of 11 players try to kick or head a ball into the opponents' goal
{n: sticking point} a point at which an impasse arises in progress toward an agreement or a goal
{n: striving, nisus, pains, strain} an effortful attempt to attain a goal
{n: tactic, tactics, maneuver, manoeuvre} a plan for attaining a particular goal
{n: terrorism, act of terrorism, terrorist act} the calculated use of violence (or threat of violence) against civilians in order to attain goals that are political or religious or ideological in nature; this is done through intimidation or coercion or instilling fear
{n: terrorist organization, terrorist group, foreign terrorist organization, FTO} a political movement that uses terror as a weapon to achieve its goals
{n: touchdown} a score in American football; being in possession of the ball across the opponents' goal line
{n: ultimate frisbee} a game between two teams whose players try to toss a Frisbee to one another until they cross the opponents goal; possession changes hands when the Frisbee is intercepted or touches the ground or goes out of bounds
{n: water polo} a game played in a swimming pool by two teams of swimmers who try to throw an inflated ball into the opponents' goal
{n: working group, working party} a group of people working together temporarily until some goal is achieved
"the working group was supposed to report back in two weeks"
{n: yard line} in football; line parallel to the goal lines indicating position on the field
{v: achieve, accomplish, attain, reach} to gain with effort
"she achieved her goal despite setbacks"
{v: aim} direct (a remark) toward an intended goal
"She wanted to aim a pun"
{v: cash out} choose a simpler life style after questioning personal and career satisfaction goals
"After 3 decades in politics, she cashed out and moved to Polynesia"
{v: dispatch, despatch, send off} send away towards a designated goal
{v: draw a bead on, aspire, aim, shoot for} have an ambitious plan or a lofty goal
{v: drop-kick} drop and kick (a ball) as it touches the ground, as for a field goal
{v: drop-kick} score (a goal) by making a dropkick
{v: harmonize, harmonise, reconcile} bring into consonance or accord
"harmonize one's goals with one's abilities"
{v: have, get, make} achieve a point or goal
"Nicklaus had a 70"
"The Brazilian team got 4 goals"
"She made 29 points that day"
{v: hit} hit the intended target or goal
{v: joyride, tool, tool around} ride in a car with no particular goal and just for the pleasure of it
"We tooled down the street"
{v: kick} make a goal
"He kicked the extra point after touchdown"
{v: maneuver, manoeuver, manoeuvre} act in order to achieve a certain goal
"He maneuvered to get the chairmanship"
"She maneuvered herself into the directorship"
{v: outdo, outflank, trump, best, scoop} get the better of
"the goal was to best the competition"
{v: perambulate, walk about, walk around} walk with no particular goal
"we were walking around in the garden"
"after breakfast, she walked about in the park"
{v: place-kick} score (a goal) by making a place kick
{v: pull off, negociate, bring off, carry off, manage} be successful ; achieve a goal
"She succeeded in persuading us all"
"I managed to carry the box upstairs"
"She pulled it off, even though we never thought her capable of it"
"The pianist negociated the difficult runs"
<-> fail
{v: race} to work as fast as possible towards a goal, sometimes in competition with others
"We are racing to find a cure for AIDS"
{v: reach, make, get to, progress to} reach a goal, e.g., "make the first team"
"We made it!"
"She may not make the grade"
{v: refocus} focus anew
"The group needs to refocus its goals"
{v: satisfice, staisfise} decide on and pursue a course of action satisfying the minimum requirements to achieve a goal
"optimization requires processes that are more complex than those needed to merely satisfice"
{v: scout, reconnoiter, reconnoitre} explore, often with the goal of finding something or somebody
{v: shoot} score
"shoot a basket"
"shoot a goal"
{v: succeed, win, come through, bring home the bacon, deliver the goods} attain success or reach a desired goal
"The enterprise succeeded"
"We succeeded in getting tickets to the show"
"she struggled to overcome her handicap and won"
<-> fail
{v: target, aim, place, direct, point} intend (something) to move towards a certain goal
"He aimed his fists towards his opponent's face"
"criticism directed at her superior"
"direct your anger towards others, not towards yourself"
{v: tie, draw} finish a game with an equal number of points, goals, etc.
"The teams drew a tie"
{v: travel purposefully} travel volitionally and in a certain direction with a certain goal
{v: tug, labor, labour, push, drive} strive and make an effort to reach a goal
"She tugged for years to make a decent living"
"We have to push a little to make the deadline!"
"She is driving away at her doctoral thesis"
{v: work} proceed towards a goal or along a path or through an activity
"work your way through every problem or task"
"She was working on her second martini when the guests arrived"
"Start from the bottom and work towards the top"
Mary Lou Kau and Joel Fischer of the University of Hawaii reported a case of a woman who got herself to jog regularly by setting up a simple arrangement with her husband:
夏威夷大学玛莉·卢·考和乔尔·费希尔报告过一位妇女的案例,这位女士使自己坚持慢跑锻炼的方法就是和丈夫达成了一项简短的协议
he paid her quarters and took her out on weekends whenever she met her jogging goals.
-无论何时,只要她实现了慢跑目标,丈夫都给她一些零钱,并在周末陪她出去玩。
The American commander felt strongly that reconciliation--not humiliation -- was necessary to achieve his goal of building a democracy in Japan.
这位美国统帅强烈地感到和解-一而不是屈辱-是达到他在日本重建民主的目标所需要的。
Despite the overwhelming success of Titanic, DiCaprio insists he has not changed his acting goals.
尽管有着《泰坦尼克号》辉煌的成功,迪卡普里奥却坚持认为他并没有改变自己的表演目标。
The National Science and Technology Board grants krdl $23 million annually with the goal of helping Singapore to move up the technology ladder; it is the institute's role to design just how the nation climbs that ladder.
国家科学技术委员会拨给 krdl 每年 2, 300万美元,用于帮助新加坡进行科技改良,至于具做法,则由 krdl 全权负责。
The goal is to protect the elephants from themselves and motorists.
这样做的目的是为了保护大象和汽车司机。
" The goal is not to manipulate people's preferences, " says Kosslyn, " just to speak to their actual desires. "
科斯林说:研究的目的不是为了操纵人们的喜好,只是想激发他们内心的真实愿望。
Says Ellen Stovall, executive director of the National Coalition for Cancer Survivorship, "( The goal) should be helping people live as long and as well as they can. "
美国国家癌病生存联合会执行理事埃伦斯托瓦尔说:我们的目标是帮助人们尽量生活得更好和更长久。
In contrast to the old days, when the goal of coloring your hair was to make sure nobody could tell, the new wave grows out of a peacock-like desire to make sure everyone within a 10-mile radius notices.
过去染发的目的是使别人不知道你的头发是什麽颜色,与此相反,新的潮流源自于孔雀开屏的愿望,要使 10英里之内的人都注意到。
You have to articulate tangible goals as a CEO and Shackleton may have had some problems in this regard. "
当一个首席执行官,你得把一些看得见摸得着的目标说给大家听,而沙克尔顿在这一方面也出了点问题。
As you head toward your goal, a tiny cross indicating your current position moves with you.
当你朝目标前进时,有个指示你当前位置的小十字会随你一起移动。
" I wanted to do something entrepreneurial, " she says." The MBA wasn't the end goal. "
我想创办事业,她说。读工商管理硕士并不是最终的目标。
Differences between highly creative art and highly creative science arise in part from a difference in their goals.
高度创造性的艺术与高度创造性的科学之间的差异,部分程度上缘起于两者目标之不同。对科学而言,一种全新的理论即是创造性行为的目标和终极结果。
For the sciences, a new theory is the goal and end result of the creative act.
富于创新的科学产生全新的命题(propsition),依据这些全新的命题,各种形形色色的现象便能以更为连贯的方式彼此联系起来。
The goal of highly creative art is very different: the phenomenon itself becomes the direct product of the creative act.
高度创造性的艺术,其目标迥然不同:现象本身即成为创造性行为的产物。
It was the first time a senior Palestinian official said publicly that the government would not fulfill its key commitment under the Roadmap. Until now, Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas has said that he would negotiate with militant groups, with the long-term goal of collecting illegal weapons.
这是巴勒斯坦高级官员第一次公开表示巴勒斯坦当局不愿遵守它在路线图内做出的一项重要承诺。到目前为止,巴勒斯坦领导人阿巴斯一直表示他愿意与激进团体谈判,他的长期目标是收缴非法武器。
The Senate Foreign Relations Committee is to vote next Tuesday on the Bolton nomination. Its hearings on the issue were marked by charges that Mr. Bolton, as Under-Secretary of State for arms control, bullied intelligence analysts he perceived to be impeding his policy goals.
国会参议院外交关系委员会下星期二将就是否批准博尔顿的提名进行表决。在博尔顿的提名听证会上,有人指责说,他在担任负责军备控制事务的国务次卿时,粗暴地对待那些他认为阻碍了自己政策目标的情报分析人员。
The president's biggest domestic goal is reforming the federal pension program to allow younger workers to invest in private accounts to earn a higher rate of return.
布什总统最大的国内施政目标是改革政府的养老金计划,让年轻的工作人员能够把社会保障税储存在个人账户中,以便获得更高的回报。
Historically, presidents have also used the State of the Union Address to inspire lawmakers and ordinary citizens alike to attain loftier goals.
历史上,美国总统还通过国情咨文鼓舞议员和普通民众,实现更加崇高的目标。
A day after Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld was questioned about the shortages by a soldier who will soon be deployed to Iraq, Army Lieutenant General Steve Whitcomb told reporters about 2,000 more fully armored Humvees are still needed. "Our goal and what we're working towards is that no wheeled vehicle that leaves Kuwait going into Iraq is driven by a solder that does not have some level of armored protection on it," he said.
一名即将调往伊拉克的士兵星期三向国防部长拉姆斯菲尔德提出了部队车辆缺乏装甲的问题。星期四,陆军中将史蒂夫·惠特科姆对媒体表示,美军仍然需要大约两 千辆装甲防护齐全的“悍马”军车。他说:“我们的目标和努力方向是,任何一名 军人驾驶的、离开科威特前往伊拉克的车辆,都不能没有某种程度的装甲防护。”
spsc-49221502
Sport goals
运动的目标
F43.2
Adjustment disorders
States of subjective distress and emotional disturbance, usually interfering with social
functioning and performance, arising in the period of adaptation to a significant life
change or a stressful life event. The stressor may have affected the integrity of an
individual's social network (bereavement, separation experiences) or the wider system of
social supports and values (migration, refugee status), or represented a major
developmental transition or crisis (going to school, becoming a parent, failure to attain
a cherished personal goal, retirement). Individual predisposition or vulnerability plays
an important role in the risk of occurrence and the shaping of the manifestations of
adjustment disorders, but it is nevertheless assumed that the condition would not have
arisen without the stressor. The manifestations vary and include depressed mood, anxiety
or worry (or mixture of these), a feeling of inability to cope, plan ahead, or continue in
the present situation, as well as some degree of disability in the performance of daily
routine. Conduct disorders may be an associated feature, particularly in adolescents. The
predominant feature may be a brief or prolonged depressive reaction, or a disturbance of
other emotions and conduct.
Culture shock
Grief reaction
Hospitalism in children
Excludes: separation anxiety disorder of childhood (F93.0)
适应障碍症
主观的苦恼或情绪困扰状态 , 通常对社会功能及社
交表现造成妨碍 , 此状况发生於对某一重大生活改
变或生活压力事件後的适应时期。此压力事件可能
已影响到一个人社会网路的整全状态 ( 如生离死别
) , 或影响到更大的社会支持或价值系统 ( 如移民
流亡 ) , 或代表一种发展之转型或危机 ( 如上学、
初为人父、人母、未能达成人生既定目标、退休 )
。个别的体质及易罹病性对此疾病发生的危险性及
适应障碍症状表现的形式扮演重要的角色 , 但假定
没有此压力事件 , 就不会有此种疾病的产生。临床
表现上各式各样 , 包含忧郁、焦虑、烦恼 ( 或以上
的混合 ) , 感觉无法去应付 , 无法事前做计划或觉
得在目前的环境下无法继续做下去 , 而每天的例行
表现也有某种程度的损害。行为障碍可能是连带的
表现 , 尤其在青少年。最显着的表现可能是短期或
长期忧郁或其他情绪、行为障碍。
文化休克
悲伤反应
儿童住院徵候群
不包含 : 儿童期分离焦虑症 (93.0)
goal oriented 目标指向
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