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 midterm ['midtә:m]   添加此单词到默认生词本
a. 中期的

n. 期中考试




    midterm
    [ noun ]
    1. the middle of the gestation period

    2. <noun.time>
    3. middle of an academic term or a political term in office

    4. <noun.time>
    5. an examination administered in the middle of an academic term

    6. <noun.communication>


    midterm \midterm\ n.
    1. the middle of the gestation period.
    [WordNet 1.5]

    2. The middle of an academic term or a political term in
    office.
    [WordNet 1.5]

    3. An examination given in the middle of an academic term; a
    midterm examination.

    Syn: midterm examination, midterm exam, midterm.
    [WordNet 1.5]

    1. Blacks were a key element in Democratic election victories in the two midterm elections of Ronald Reagan's presidency.
    2. As reflected by the extremely low volume, most investors remained on the sidelines, he said, noting that most investors with a midterm or long-term stance aren't willing to sell stocks at current low levels.
    3. The sale follows a rousing victory for President Carlos Salinas de Gortari in this month's midterm legislative elections.
    4. With midterm congressional elections approaching and other pressures mounting, the administration needs more than a soft landing.
    5. It says voters always use elections to the European Parliament to register protest against governments in midterm, and that the turnout of 36 percent is too low to shape lasting judgments.
    6. With their victory over Republicans in November's midterm elections, Democrats recaptured control of the U.S. Senate.
    7. Mexico's ruling party appeared on its way to a big victory in Sunday's national congressional elections, but allegations of ballot-rigging, especially in two closely contested gubernatorial races, put a taint on the midterm vote.
    8. The midterm leadership turnover came because of the resignation of Jim Wright of Texas as speaker and of Coelho as whip.
    9. And later that night, she had trouble keeping her mind on a midterm exam in portfolio management.
    10. At midterm, he transferred to the 320-student Meridian.
    11. Fitzwater called the results "two sentimental losses." On the other hand, Republicans held on to the governor's office in California, the biggest prize of the midterm elections, and in Illinois.
    12. The historic trend in midterm elections is for gains of 28 House seats and four Senate seats for the party not holding the White House.
    13. With new emphasis on government integrity and with memories of the expensive, negative 1986 midterm elections still fresh, there is growing support for overhauling the way congressional election campaigns are financed.
    14. Mr. Bush, smarting from a midterm election disaster, now has the time to devote his energy to the Gulf crisis.
    15. The 1990 midterm elections still are months away but thoughts already are turning toward the 1992 race for the White House.
    16. He was reinstated in 1985 in an unusual, midterm appointment that suggests he was brought back to handle the economic crisis.
    17. The two victors, both considered liberals, fill out the new leadership team Democrats have had to install in midterm because of the resignations of Speaker Jim Wright of Texas, and Whip Tony Coelho of California, both following ethics allegations.
    18. But he said some pay will be deducted from paychecks of teachers who don't turn in the midterm grades, which are due April 7.
    19. "In midterm, the government aims to hold what it has.
    20. Larry Vaden, an individual investor and longtime student of the stock market in Trenton, Texas, says he is planning to invest more aggressively because the midterm election indicator gives him confidence.
    21. The Democratic plan clearly was a political statement, veto bait for the president, an attempt to highlight the issue in the final weeks before the midterm elections.
    22. Florida and Illinois institutions pushed yields up on the midterm maturity.
    23. And experts fear new, more widespread increases as early as midterm if local economies worsen.
    24. The release of the first Upjohn product in the U.S. in 1977 raised hope that a safe, simple, nonsurgical method of midterm abortion had arrived.
    25. In a midterm earnings report issued in September, Daiwa said it had one trillion yen in cash and deposits, with current assets totaling 3.7 trillion yen.
    26. The teachers union, United Teachers Los Angeles, plans to have members give students their midterm grades on a union report card rather than officially report them to the district after exams Friday.
    27. Communion and Liberation has called for the establishment of ethics committees in public hospitals to decide whether to approve midterm abortions.
    28. The four-month delay in the so-called midterm review of the Uruguay Round meant that progress was frozen in 11 areas of tentative agreement, including important ones such as freeing trade in services and monitoring nations' trade policies.
    29. The president was focusing on a handful of tight races in the closing days of the midterm elections.
    30. "We may call for midterm elections," Ahmed said, "or we may even call for a mass movement against" the Pakistan People's Party.
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