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 norm [nɔrm]   添加此单词到默认生词本
n. 基准, 模范, 标准, 准则, 平均数

[化] 定额

[医] 标准, 规格

[经] 标准, 规范




    norm
    [ noun ]
    1. a standard or model or pattern regarded as typical

    2. <noun.linkdef>
      the current middle-class norm of two children per family
    3. a statistic describing the location of a distribution

    4. <noun.cognition>
      it set the norm for American homes


    Norm \Norm\, n. [L. norma a rule. See {Normal}, a.]
    1. A rule or authoritative standard; a model; a type; as,
    deviations from the norm are not tolerated.
    [1913 Webster +PJC]

    2. (Biol.) A typical, structural unit; a type. --Agassiz.

    1. Brash, unsuitable ties - penguin and teddy bear motifs seem popular - remain the norm. The colour is still to be found, but you have to look increasingly hard to spot it.
    2. In fact, it was once the norm for this country, and a return to such a norm would ensure the end of sexually transmitted AIDS.
    3. In fact, it was once the norm for this country, and a return to such a norm would ensure the end of sexually transmitted AIDS.
    4. The first Israeli film on the Palestinian uprising brings three generations of Jews to the green fields of the occupied West Bank and says they failed to recognize when senseless killing becomes the norm.
    5. Employees working in areas where they are in contact with the public, or where conservative clothes are the norm, still tend to wear more formal garb.
    6. "Crisis management, after the fact, has become the norm too often," Watkins wrote.
    7. Judge Stephen Tumin, chief inspector of prisons, said in a report last week on Strangeways that one shower a week was the norm for the inmates and up to 400 men had no work assignments.
    8. Underwriting risk was very small and remuneration was correspondingly slight, it argued. The deal was not the first to offer underwriting fees lower than the norm established in the dark days of the late 1980s.
    9. New company formations may therefore provide a useful indicator of start-up activity. Year on year growth in new company formations was the norm until the year ended March 1989.
    10. The working mother has made the transition from novelty to national norm, with more than half of new mothers remaining in the job market for the first time, the Census Bureau said yesterday.
    11. This sort of volatile, tightly-packed league race was for many years the norm in the first division.
    12. Now, the norm is six months.
    13. The USDA released its weekly crop-progress report after the close, showing little improvement in the corn and soybean crops, with development well behind the norm.
    14. Nestle's current dividend payout represents about 28% of profits, the norm for Switzerland but far below the food-industry average of 37%.
    15. They finally realized, `Hey, these guys are talented at what they do."' While tough-guy roles are the norm, some wrestlers have been asked to play against type.
    16. "However offensive that book may be, inciting murder and offering rewards for its perpetration are deeply offensive to the norm of civilized behavior." _President Bush.
    17. Pre-employment physicals used to be the norm before employment.
    18. The high tide in Portland was 13.65 feet, nearly 4 feet above its norm but below the city's all-time high of 14.7 feet.
    19. The growing number of expulsions appears to indicate that deportations "are the norm rather than the exception," she added.
    20. It's the norm in the rest of Europe.' Party leaders will look for support generally on an issue-by-issue basis. This is the approach of Mr David Rogers, leader of the Liberal Democrats in the hung council of East Sussex, formerly Conservative.
    21. Others have passed their store cards to finance houses when the financial going got tough.' A year ago it looked as though farming administration out to finance houses would become the norm. However, the trend has now come to a halt.
    22. But your average softball fanatic regards those divergences from the norm as incidental, and even charming.
    23. The exhibit has lured in many during a season that demanded a good umbrella: More than 28 inches of rain fell from April to July, double the norm.
    24. The implication of the apologies is that this bout of 'dango' was an exception and not the norm, as Washington suspects.
    25. An increasing number of companies are replacing adversarial attitudes with a new spirit of partnership in the workplace. Of course, the techniques of Human Resource Management are still hardly the norm in British industry.
    26. He hopes the London Bus companies will not demand the giddy buyers' premiums which have become the norm in the provinces.
    27. Doing business in Russian takes nerve: Sergei Mavrodi merely shows a little more than the norm.
    28. Hotel amenities have slowly improved for women. Hair dryers are the norm. There is better lighting; bathrobes; skirt hangers; ironing boards; door spy holes and door chains.
    29. Clearcutting, which fells all trees in an area, is the norm here.
    30. Even in Japan, where lifetime employment had been a norm, part-time work is growing faster than in the U.S.
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