local
名词 n.
形容词 adj.
副词 adv.
英 /ˈləʊ.kl̩/
美 /ˈloʊ.kl̩/
英文释义
名词 n.
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A person who lives in or near a given place.
— It's easy to tell the locals from the tourists.
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A branch of a nationwide organization such as a trade union.
— I'm in the TWU, too. Local 6.
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Clipping of local train.
— The expresses skipped my station, so I had to take a local.
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One's nearest or regularly frequented public house or bar.
— I got barred from my local, so I've started going all the way into town for a drink.
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A locally scoped identifier.
— Functional programming languages usually don't allow changing the immediate value of locals once they've been initialized, unless they're explicitly marked as being mutable.
- An item of news relating to the place where the newspaper is published.
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Clipping of local anesthetic.
— Well, Mr. Dalton, you may add nine staples to your dossier of thirty‐one broken bones, two bullet wounds, nine puncture wounds and four steel screws. That’s an estimate, of course. I’ll give you a local.
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An independent trader who acts for themselves rather than on behalf of investors.
— On most futures exchanges, there are two major types of futures traders/members: commission brokers and locals.
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A Twitter user who is not a part of Stan Twitter.
— Her camera roll is filled with pictures and videos of her idol, she doesn't let any of her friends see her account because "no locals allowed", […]
形容词 adj.
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From or in a nearby location.
— We prefer local produce.
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Connected directly to a particular computer, processor, etc.; able to be accessed offline.
— local disk drive
- Having limited scope (either lexical or dynamic); only accessible within a certain portion of a program.
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Applying to or satisfied by substructures understood as "near points;" in particular:; Satisfied by at least one open neighborhood of every point.
— A Hausdorff space satisfying local compactness need not be (globally) compact!
- Applying to or satisfied by substructures understood as "near points;" in particular:; Satisfied by arbitrarily small open neighborhoods of every point.
- Applying to or satisfied by substructures understood as "near points;" in particular:; Satisfied by every finitely generated subgroup.
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Detectable from the behavior of substructures understood to be "near points;" in particular:; Such that the following conditions are equivalent: (1) P holds for R (M); (2) P holds for the localization R_p (M_p) for all prime ideals p of R; (3) P holds for the localization R_m (M_m) for all maximal ideals m of R.
— Flatness is a local property.
- Detectable from the behavior of substructures understood to be "near points;" in particular:; Detectable from the behavior of the normalizers of the nontrivial p-subgroups.
- Having a unique maximal (left) ideal.
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Of or pertaining to a restricted part of an organism.
— local lesion
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Descended from an indigenous population.
— Hawaiian Pidgin is spoken by the local population.
副词 adv.
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In the local area; within a city, state, country, etc.
— It's never been more important to buy local.
词源
词源 1
From Middle English local, from Late Latin locālis (“belonging to a place”), possibly also via Old French local; ultimately from Latin locus (“a place”).
The ring-theoretic senses derive from Krull, who first referred to Noetherian commutative rings with a unique maximal ideal as "Stellenring" (Stellen (“place”) + ring) in 1938. The term was inspired by algebraic geometry, where local rings encode information about the behavior of curves (surfaces, etc.) at points; hence, describe "local" behavior.
The ring-theoretic senses derive from Krull, who first referred to Noetherian commutative rings with a unique maximal ideal as "Stellenring" (Stellen (“place”) + ring) in 1938. The term was inspired by algebraic geometry, where local rings encode information about the behavior of curves (surfaces, etc.) at points; hence, describe "local" behavior.
词源 2
From Middle English local, from Late Latin locālis (“belonging to a place”), possibly also via Old French local; ultimately from Latin locus (“a place”).
The ring-theoretic senses derive from Krull, who first referred to Noetherian commutative rings with a unique maximal ideal as "Stellenring" (Stellen (“place”) + ring) in 1938. The term was inspired by algebraic geometry, where local rings encode information about the behavior of curves (surfaces, etc.) at points; hence, describe "local" behavior.
The ring-theoretic senses derive from Krull, who first referred to Noetherian commutative rings with a unique maximal ideal as "Stellenring" (Stellen (“place”) + ring) in 1938. The term was inspired by algebraic geometry, where local rings encode information about the behavior of curves (surfaces, etc.) at points; hence, describe "local" behavior.
词源 3
From Middle English local, from Late Latin locālis (“belonging to a place”), possibly also via Old French local; ultimately from Latin locus (“a place”).
The ring-theoretic senses derive from Krull, who first referred to Noetherian commutative rings with a unique maximal ideal as "Stellenring" (Stellen (“place”) + ring) in 1938. The term was inspired by algebraic geometry, where local rings encode information about the behavior of curves (surfaces, etc.) at points; hence, describe "local" behavior.
The ring-theoretic senses derive from Krull, who first referred to Noetherian commutative rings with a unique maximal ideal as "Stellenring" (Stellen (“place”) + ring) in 1938. The term was inspired by algebraic geometry, where local rings encode information about the behavior of curves (surfaces, etc.) at points; hence, describe "local" behavior.
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数据来源: Wiktionary