consecutive

名词 n. 形容词 adj.
/kənˈsɛkjʊtɪv/    /kənˈsɛkjʊtɪv/

英文释义

名词 n.
  1. A sequence of notes or chords that results from repeated shifts in pitch of the same interval. countable
    — The theory suggests, but does not state explicitly, that the prohibition of consecutives is the stricter the nearer the interval in question lies to the fundamental component of a blend.
  2. A linguistic form that implies or describes an event that follows temporally from another. countable
    — What marks the consecutive is its special morphology and syntax indicating the temporal succession of actions.
  3. Consecutive interpretation. countable,uncountable
    — Having an audience would have allowed a more natural setting for the consecutive. The choice of individual sessions was dictated by the following considerations: (i) given that the recordings were made on an itinerant basis (sometimes at subjects' homes), it would have proved practically impossible to arrange an audience for every session; (ii) recruiting an audience for the consecutives recorded at university would have limited the pool of potential subjects without prior knowledge of the speeches; (iii) it would have been inconsistent to record some interpretations before an audience and others in individual sessions.
形容词 adj.
  1. Following, in succession, without interruption. not-comparable
    — He follows Frédi Kanouté, who achieved the feat in 2006 and 2007 for Sevilla, in scoring in consecutive Uefa Cup/Europa League finals.
  2. Having some logical sequence. not-comparable

词形变化

consecutives plural

词源

词源 1
From French consécutif, from Medieval Latin cōnsecūtīvus, from Latin cōnsecūtus (“followed up”), from Latin cōnsequor (“to travel”).
词源 2
From French consécutif, from Medieval Latin cōnsecūtīvus, from Latin cōnsecūtus (“followed up”), from Latin cōnsequor (“to travel”).
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