predictor

英[prɪ'dɪktə(r)] 美[prɪ'dɪktər]
  • n. 预言者
  • predacity n.(动物的)捕食性;食肉性;掠夺性
  • predate v.在日期上早于
  • predator n.食肉动物;掠夺者;(动物的)捕食性天敌
  • predatory adj.掠夺的;捕食生物的
  • predawn adj.黎明前的
Noun:
  1. someone who makes predictions of the future (usually on the basis of special knowledge)

  2. information that supports a probabilistic estimate of future events;

    "the weekly bulletin contains several predictors of mutual fund performance"

  3. a computer for controlling antiaircraft fire that computes the position of an aircraft at the instant of a shell's arrival

1. Opinion polls are an unreliable predictor of election outcomes.
民意测验并不能对选举结果进行可靠预测。

来自柯林斯例句

2. Cholesterol level is not a strong predictor of heart disease in women.
胆固醇含量不能有效地预示妇女心脏病。

来自《权威词典》

3. The child's reaction to the arrival of the new baby was a very good predictor of how they would get on during the year that followed.
通过观察孩子对新生儿到来的反应能很好预测在接下来的一年中他们会不会相处融洽。

来自柯林斯例句

4. Poor physical fitness is a better predictor of death than smoking, hypertension and heart disease.
与吸烟 、 高血压、心脏病相比,体质差导致死亡的危险更大.

来自时文部分

5. The only significant pre - treatment predictor of post - treatment pregnancy success was sperm motility.
治疗前检查的唯一的有意义的指标是精子活力. 这个指标可预测治疗后怀孕成功率.

来自互联网

    用作名词 (n.)
    1. The past is no predictor of the future.
      过去是无法预测未来的。
    2. A failing management system is a predictor of much larger failure.
      一个失效的管理体系就是更大失效的前兆。