canonical

名词 n. 形容词 adj.
/kəˈnɒn.ɪ.kəl/|[kəˈnɒn.ɪ.kɫ̩]    /kəˈnɑ.nɪ.kəl/|[kəˈnɑ.nɪ.kɫ̩]|/kəˈnɔn.ɪ.kəl/|[kəˈnɔn.ɪ.kɫ̩]

英文释义

名词 n.
  1. The formal robes of a priest. plural,plural-only
    — He, good man, could make but little of his solitary friend, and must many a time have been startled out of his canonicals by the strange, alien speeches which he heard.
  2. A URL presented in canonical form. Internet
    — Google advises canonicals as one of the preferred methods of treating duplicate content in your CMS.
形容词 adj.
  1. Present in a canon, religious or otherwise.
    — The Gospel of Luke is a canonical New Testament book.
  2. According to recognised or orthodox rules.
    — The men played golf in the most canonical way, with no local rules.
  3. Stated or used in the most basic and straightforwardly applicable manner.
    — the reduction of a linear substitution to its canonical form
  4. Prototypical.
  5. In conformity with canon law.
  6. In the form of a canon.
  7. Of or pertaining to an ecclesiastical chapter.
  8. In canonical form.
  9. Distinguished among entities of its kind, so that it can be picked out in a way that does not depend on any arbitrary choices.
    — It turns out that ordered pairs can be defined in set theory, e.g. as (x,y)#58;#61;#92;#123;#92;#123;x,y#92;#125;,y#92;#125;. Note that in no sense is such a definition canonical.
  10. Related to or part of the canon of a fictional universe; officially part of a fictional work’s established continuity. slang

词形变化

more canonical comparative most canonical superlative canonicals plural

词源

词源 1
From Middle English canonycal, from Medieval Latin canōnicālis. By surface analysis, canon + -ical.
词源 2
From Middle English canonycal, from Medieval Latin canōnicālis. By surface analysis, canon + -ical.
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