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augmented    音标拼音: [ɑgm'ɛntəd]
a. 增加的;增大的

增加的;增大的

augmented
增加 添加 扩充

augmented
adj 1: added to or made greater in amount or number or strength;
"his augmented renown"; "a greatly augmented collection
of books"


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  • word usage - Is augmented with or augmented by preferable . . .
    11 Which is the preferred preposition to use after the word "augmented", as in the sentence "A is augmented with by B"? Does this depend on context? For concreteness, I am interested in mathematical usage, as in the "The set is augmented with redundant vectors for greater numerical robustness"
  • How do augment and increase differ? - English Language Usage . . .
    From Google's definition: aug·ment verb ôɡˈment 1 make (something) greater by adding to it; increase "he augmented his summer income by painting houses" When you use augment, you mean that you are adding to something by adding in something else; the word is generally used with a prepositional phrase starting with by or with Increase doesn't have that sense Now, to your example If the
  • First Product Produced - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    This leads to the conversion of core product to actual product and then augmented product So, augmented product gives final complete product to the customer
  • punctuation - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    I tend to use the rule that colons should only be before a list, or as an augmented period to indicate that the second part defines or gives an example of the first
  • Suped-up: is it a real idiom (vs souped-up)
    Both sources below attest that the correct more common spelling is soup-up Suped-up and sooped-up are are just misspellings The expression is AmE in origin and it most likely derives from supercharge: As World Wide Words notes: Souped-up is known both in the UK and the US and was actually created in the latter country It’s one of the longer-lived slang terms, still widely used In its
  • single word requests - How do you call wooden extension above water . . .
    A pier may be built of wood, but many are constructed of steel pillars The term does certainly, however, overlap with 'jetty' It is usually pretty substantial The jetty is typically long, often wooden, and raised above the water level Though mooring may be involved, 'A jetty may serve as a breakwater, as a walkway, or both; or, in pairs, as a means of constricting a channel ' [Wikipedia
  • grammar - Be supposed to and its meanings - English Language Usage . . .
    Merriam-Webster [augmented, especially with further examples, below] asserts that there are six, not just two, senses that should be distinguished The ones showing deontic modality (moral obligation; permission) are
  • idioms - Idiomatic stress: phrasal verbs - English Language Usage . . .
    The hall filled up when the band arrived and It was pouring It was pouring down But in the first augmented sentence, the particle 'completive up ' is stressed, while, as pointed out, the simplex verb is stressed when 'down' is added to 'It was pouring ' The patterns are different But Longman Pronunciation Dictionary does allow for the odd
  • Whats the difference between increased and increasing?
    Increased as a past participle merely means augmented relative to some prior value, e g , a car traveling at 20 mph that was previously going at 10 mph Increasing means that the rate has been going up, and continues to go up
  • etymology - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    English tends to take foreign names and 1) Retain the foreign spelling and pronounce it like English, 2) Retain the pronunciation and respell as if it were an English word, or 3) Mispronounce the word to sound English and then spell it that way (e g Florence instead of Firenze, Ceylon instead of Sri Lanka) But in this case English took the Polish spelling of a Czech word, which seems





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