英文字典中文字典


英文字典中文字典51ZiDian.com



中文字典辞典   英文字典 a   b   c   d   e   f   g   h   i   j   k   l   m   n   o   p   q   r   s   t   u   v   w   x   y   z       







请输入英文单字,中文词皆可:

individualist    音标拼音: [,ɪndɪvɪd'uəlɪst]
n. 个人主义者,利己主义者
a. 个人主义的

个人主义者,利己主义者个人主义的

individualist
adj 1: marked by or expressing individuality; "an
individualistic way of dressing" [synonym: {individualist},
{individualistic}]
n 1: a person who pursues independent thought or action

individualist \individualist\ n.
a person who pursues independent thought or action.
[WordNet 1.5]


请选择你想看的字典辞典:
单词字典翻译
individualist查看 individualist 在百度字典中的解释百度英翻中〔查看〕
individualist查看 individualist 在Google字典中的解释Google英翻中〔查看〕
individualist查看 individualist 在Yahoo字典中的解释Yahoo英翻中〔查看〕





安装中文字典英文字典查询工具!


中文字典英文字典工具:
选择颜色:
输入中英文单字

































































英文字典中文字典相关资料:


  • What are the differences between su, sudo -s, sudo -i, sudo su?
    sudo su Asks your password, becomes root momentarily to run su as root sudo su - Asks your password, becomes root momentarily to run su - as root So in this case you are running su using sudo and you don't have to know root's actual password The results are same as su and su -
  • su vs sudo -s vs sudo -i vs sudo bash - Unix Linux Stack Exchange
    su is equivalent to sudo -i and simulates a login into the root account Your working directory will be root, and it will read root's profile etc The prompt will change from $ to #, indicating you have root access sudo -s launches a shell as root, but doesn't change your working directory sudo bash where bash is command to run with sudo
  • Why do we use su - and not just su? - Unix Linux Stack Exchange
    The main difference is : su - username sets up the shell environment as if it were a clean login as the specified user, it access and use specified users environment variables, su username just starts a shell with current environment settings for the specified user If username is not specified with su and su -, the root account is implied as default
  • su - user Vs sudo su - user - Unix Linux Stack Exchange
    8 sudo su - will elevate any user (sudoer) with root privilege su - anotheruser will switch to user environment of the target user, with target user privileges What does sudo su - username mean?
  • What is the difference between su - and su root? [duplicate]
    8 su - switches to the superuser and sets up the environment so that it looks like they logged in directly su root switches to the user named root and doesn't simulate directly logging in If the superuser is named root, then su and su root are equivalent (and don't simulate directly logging in), as are su - and su - root (which do)
  • What is the difference between su - , sudo bash and sudo sh?
    su -: This will change your user identifier and inherit the environment variables as if you had logged in with that user Normally you would use the format su - <userid> to login as the user If you drop the "userid" it assumes you are trying to login as root - which you can't (unless you change the root password) sudo bash sudo sh: Anything after the sudo is a program to run - so in these
  • command line - difference between sudo su - and su - - Ask Ubuntu
    The difference between sudo su - and su - is this: With sudo su - you will be asked to authenticate with your user password (assuming you have sudo privileges) If you have sudo privileges with no password, then you will not be prompted for a password and instead will be logged into root immediately With su - you will be asked to authenticate with the root password This only works if you
  • What are the differences between sudo, su, visudo, chroot, and gksu?
    su - Also a way of elevation, but has differences as it performs a full interactive logon as root (or another user), and gives a bash prompt unless specified otherwise with arguments It uses the target user's credentials as authentication visudo - Edits the sudoers file
  • Is there a single line command to do `su`? - Ask Ubuntu
    Here's why: If you write a password in a command like su <username> -p <password>, it would be stored in plain text in your bash history This is certainly a huge security issue If you need to run commands with su (or sudo) in an automated way, write a shellscript containig the commands without su or sudo and run su <username> script sh
  • Why `su` gives su: Authentication failure even when running as root?
    Somewhat like in How to suppress su authentication failure warning?, but it actually does not run the command at all # su limited su: Authentication failure # su -s bin bash limited su: Authenti





中文字典-英文字典  2005-2009