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 superior [sə'pɪrɪɚ]   添加此单词到默认生词本
n. 长者, 占优势的人, 上级

a. 上级的, 出众的, 高傲的

[医] 上的

[经] 较大的, 高级的, 优等的




    superior
    [ noun ]
    1. one of greater rank or station or quality

    2. <noun.person>
    3. the head of a religious community

    4. <noun.person>
    5. a combatant who is able to defeat rivals

    6. <noun.person>
    7. the largest freshwater lake in the world; the deepest of the Great Lakes

    8. <noun.object>
    9. a town in northwest Wisconsin on Lake Superior across from Duluth

    10. <noun.location>
    11. a character or symbol set or printed or written above and immediately to one side of another character

    12. <noun.communication>
    [ adj ]
    1. of high or superior quality or performance

    2. <adj.all>
      superior wisdom derived from experience
      superior math students
    3. of or characteristic of high rank or importance

    4. <adj.all>
      a superior ruler
    5. written or printed above and to one side of another character

    6. <adj.all>
    7. having an orbit farther from the sun than the Earth's orbit

    8. <adj.all>
      Mars and Jupiter are the closest in of the superior planets
    9. (sometimes followed by `to') not subject to or influenced by

    10. <adj.all>
      overcome by a superior opponent
      trust magnates who felt themselves superior to law
    11. having a higher rank

    12. <adj.all>
      superior officer
    13. (often followed by `to') above being affected or influenced by

    14. <adj.all>
      he is superior to fear
      an ignited firework proceeds superior to circumstances until its blazing vitality fades


    Superior \Su*pe"ri*or\, a. [L., compar. of superus being above,
    fr. super above, over: cf. F. sup['e]rieur. See {Super-}, and
    cf. {Supreme}.]
    1. More elevated in place or position; higher; upper; as, the
    superior limb of the sun; the superior part of an image.

    2. Higher in rank or office; more exalted in dignity; as, a
    superior officer; a superior degree of nobility.

    3. Higher or greater in excellence; surpassing others in the
    greatness, or value of any quality; greater in quality or
    degree; as, a man of superior merit; or of superior
    bravery.

    4. Beyond the power or influence of; too great or firm to be
    subdued or affected by; -- with to.

    There is not in earth a spectacle more worthy than a
    great man superior to his sufferings. --Spectator.

    5. More comprehensive; as a term in classification; as, a
    genus is superior to a species.

    6. (Bot.)
    (a) Above the ovary; -- said of parts of the flower which,
    although normally below the ovary, adhere to it, and
    so appear to originate from its upper part; also of an
    ovary when the other floral organs are plainly below
    it in position, and free from it.
    (b) Belonging to the part of an axillary flower which is
    toward the main stem; posterior.
    (c) Pointing toward the apex of the fruit; ascending; --
    said of the radicle.

    {Superior conjunction}, {Superior planets}, etc. See
    {Conjunction}, {Planet}, etc.

    {Superior figure}, {Superior letter} (Print.), a figure or
    letter printed above the line, as a reference to a note or
    an index of a power, etc; as, in x^{2} + y^{n}, 2 is a
    superior figure, n a superior letter. Cf. {Inferior
    figure}, under {Inferior}.


    Superior \Su*pe"ri*or\, n.
    1. One who is above, or surpasses, another in rank, station,
    office, age, ability, or merit; one who surpasses in what
    is desirable; as, Addison has no superior as a writer of
    pure English.

    2. (Eccl.) The head of a monastery, convent, abbey, or the
    like.

    1. Despite industry tests that proved Hoover superior, the Regina machine always won, picking up flakes that Hoover's didn't.
    2. Robert Falise, Irving's general counsel, said management views the Banca Commerciale offer as superior because, "We believe a partnership with a global financial institution makes much more sense than an acquisition by a domestic one."
    3. Not only was it making heavy losses, it had become a symbol of what was wrong with much of European industry - it had superior technology but could not bring it successfully to the market. Its experience with video cassette recorders is a case in point.
    4. For, if this magnificent exhibition at the Academy does nothing else, it demonstrates for ever the absurdity of the distinction that would make oil on canvas inherently superior to water-colour on paper, simply because it is oil on canvas.
    5. It claims it offers superior visual images to the Sony format.
    6. He views himself as a superior human being; a player that dictates to society and individuals that are weaker than himself," Prosecutor John Des Jardins said.
    7. Earlier studies have found omeprazole to be superior to Tagamet, the other commonly prescribed ulcer medicine, in healing duodenal ulcers.
    8. When the Barbary Coast of San Francisco was racked by prostitution, drugs and murder in the late 19th century, Oakland was known as the Athens of the West for its superior private schools.
    9. Olson's script involved three Vietnam veterans who had conducted scams during the war and were looking to continue them in civilian life over the opposition of their former superior officers, who had become corrupt drug agents.
    10. She says the deposit fee is far superior to the "bottle-bill" approach used in nine states, because the deposit fees affect all containers, not just beverage bottles, and containers aren't returned through retail outlets.
    11. But they are depressed by the prospect that the war won't end soon and that, over the long run, superior Iranian resources and manpower may overwhelm their current edge in military firepower.
    12. He also said other studies have found TM superior to alternative techniques in improving aspects of physical and mental health, even though the commitment of the instructors of other techniques was presumeably as high as that of the TM instructors.
    13. Herrington insisted that the Texas site, south of Dallas, was clearly superior to the others.
    14. Let me explain: Each campaign season my immediate superior, the Social Studies Department chairman, asks whether any of my classes hold sizable numbers of 18-year-olds.
    15. The technologically superior 400s can carry 392 passengers, compared with 247 in the SPs, and have a 33 percent larger cargo capacity, she said.
    16. The employee, according to the report, told a superior that the manager had alcohol on his breath and stumbled as he passed through a radiation-detecting device on the night of Oct. 10.
    17. NATO is superior to the Warsaw Treaty organization in all those components with the exception of tanks.
    18. Mecham has denied this version, saying he understood two employees had a disagreement and that he referred it to Watkins' superior, Max Hawkins.
    19. Drivers around the world now buy radials for their superior handling qualities and durablity.
    20. The 4th District Court in San Jose provisionally set bail at $12,500, but the superior court tribunal in Alejuela Province, where the trial was later moved, denied bail because of the severity of the charges.
    21. But IBM said in a statement that "in the request for proposals, the government said it did not want to overspend to achieve slightly superior technical features."
    22. At Hughes Aircraft, the loss of the FAA bid came as a blow to officials who had predicted confidently in interviews last month that their system would be judged superior.
    23. Indeed, it is the text that makes this effort far superior to Ms. Clarke's "Vienna: Lusthaus."
    24. It guaranteed a market for these nascent industries by buying only domestic products, even though foreign technology was superior.
    25. This involves tranquilizing an unsuspecting population and intervening, with "tender" intentions, in every medical situation that, again in the doctors' closed-council superior judgment, diminishes "quality" of life.
    26. Grace, a chemicals and energy concern, said the method has potential commercial applications including breeding "genetically superior" dairy cow herds.
    27. Mercader told Spanish National Radio that the state holding company had accepted Fiat's offer because it was superior to that made by Daimler.
    28. As previously reported, Coniston had said it believed its program is "superior" to Allegis's recapitalization plan to pay a $60-a-share distribution to stockholders.
    29. Professionals should succeed through superior quality of service.
    30. Given this almost religious belief in nature's goodness, we'd like to pose a philosophical question: How come nobody has explained why a natural carcinogen is morally superior to an artificial one?
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