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Перевод: scientific
[прилагательное] научный; ученый; высокого класса; техничный
Тезаурус:
- From the generalizations, theory is then built up, tentatively at first, and perhaps very low-level and crude, but always referable back to the original scientific observations.
- He exposes the vague way in which Read deploys scientific vocabulary, pointing out how much work had had to be done by a great many people and already popularized, before a literary critic could talk in this way.
- After much bitter debate, in March 1986 Britain quietly announced that it would be, reviewing" policy following scientific advances made in the SWAP programme.
- Just as important for the general reader, though, are the scientific ideas that Lewis purveys, painlessly and entertainingly.
- Apart from confirmation that in dictatorships, scientific corruption flourishes together with the more venal kinds, perhaps it is that we should not accept the recent predictions of Argentina's early possession of an independent nuclear arsenal without some reservation.
- A chance finding, outside the mainstream of scientific research, can sometimes be very valuable, but it is often difficult to see its potential.
- There have been no scientific studies to determine whether the eggs themselves are infected."
- We cannot claim these life stories to be "representative" in the strict social scientific sense, but we do believe them to be "valid".
- Talks have been going on for some time on a range of scientific matters including fusion, nuclear safety and the environment.
- By the time we have finished his chapter called "The Heavens", we have not only been informed about what the shape of the Ptolemaic universe was like, and how the belief in astrology worked, and how much knowledge was in our sense "scientific" and how much "poetic" or "mythological".
- Cherwell Scientific's list of chemistry software shows a strong commitment to scientific productivity and innovation.
- Moreover, just as natural science as we know it today is, to an important extent, a product of seventeenth-century philosophical ideas, so one of the pillars of the orthodox scientific establishment in England now is the Royal Society.
- But we also accept the precautionary principle - the need to act, where there is significant risk of damage, before the scientific evidence is conclusive.
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