中英文地名和人名建议选择专门化的地名译典或人名译典;有些缩写词在缩写词典中更容易查到;

    mobility查询结果如下:

    音标:[moʊ'bɪləti]
    名词复数:mobility 词频:高频常用词
    基本释义/说明:n.流动性;机动性;情感不定
    详解 词库 双语句典 英文释义 韦氏词典 英文百科 wiki词典 英文句库
    n.
    运动性;流动性;机动性;灵活性;
    mobility of capital
    资本的流动性.
    The army is in need of many more vehicles to increase its mobility.
    部队还需要更多车辆以提高其机动性.
    -扩展释义
    n. 【医学】 【医学】
    活动能力,机能灵活性;机能灵活性,可动性
    【机械仪器】
    迁移率
    Extrinsic semiconductor single crystals--measurement of Hall mobility and Hall coefficient
    非本征半导体单晶霍尔迁移率和霍尔系数测量方法
    n. 【船舶工程】
    灵活性,流动性;移运性
    n.
    [U]1. 流动性;移动性;【社】流动2. 机动性,3. 【物】迁移率
    -同义词和反义词

    词性:noun

    例句1. elderly people may become socially isolated as a result of restricted mobility

    例句2. the gleeful mobility of Billy’s face’

    例句3. the mobility of the product’

    -mobility的不同词性形态

    形容词 变体/同根词

    Able to be readily mobilized.
    “However, they are readily mobilizable to deal with problems arising outside their own force under mutual aid arrangements.”
    “And maybe the final point is that they are more easily mobilizable.”
    “Where are the mobilizable political armies on the liberal team?”
    Capable of being moved. || By agency of mobile phones. || Characterized by an extreme degree of fluidity; moving or flowing with great freedom. || Easily moved in feeling, purpose, or direction; excitable; changeable; fickle. || Changing in appearance and expression under the influence of the mind. || (biology) Capable of being moved, aroused, or excited; capable of spontaneous movement.
    “In a bid to reduce waiting times, 200 patients are being sent to Hope Hospital in Salford where they will be able to use a mobile scanner in the car park.”
    “She has expressively mobile features and switches from youthful hope to aged eccentricity with admirable economy.”
    “They will be able to invite mobile bankers to their homes and offices.”
    Able to be readily mobilised.
    Subject to mobilization
    Relating to mobilization.

    名词 变体/同根词

    mobility的复数形式
    “With its range of tonalities and mobilities, Niedecker’s work explodes the standard cliches of minimalism as quiet or modest.”
    “For example, foreigners are said to bring family values to a culture that cannot sustain them due to New-World mobilities, sexualities, materialisms, and freedoms.”
    “Examples of this are materials that are optimized to give high charge carrier mobilities and high exciton diffusion coefficients.”
    the act of mobilising
    “The shift of focus was from the streets to parliament, from mobilisation to legislation.”
    “The mobilisation includes paramilitary forces, regular soldiers and specially trained commandos.”
    “Early surgical debridement, enteral feeding, mobilisation of the patient, and early extubation are desirable.”
    mobilizer的异体字
    “He wasn’t a rabble-rouser, he wasn’t a fiery speaker, he wasn’t a mobiliser of large crowds, and he certainly wasn’t a guerrilla.”
    “Human rights as an ideology is a potent mobiliser of support for imperialist interventions and, as mentioned, a formidable guarantor of legitimacy.”
    a person who mobilizes something
    “Could Jeremy detect that, despite my scheme, I was a mobilizer, too?”
    “This greater goal, be it altruistic or economic, helps impassion people, and passion is a great mobilizer.”
    “Naina is now a community mobilizer, helping other girls break the cycle of exploitation.”
    The quality of being mobilizable.

    动词 变体/同根词

    (transitive) To make something mobile. || (transitive) To assemble troops and their equipment in a coordinated fashion so as to be ready for war. || (intransitive) To become made ready for war.
    “The ability to mobilize an army of such unparalleled size allowed Hideyoshi to launch a costly invasion.”
    “However, it does not give the state council the power to mobilize the military for waging war or warlike activities.”
    “It is much easier to mobilize support for a big idea than a specific issue because individuals can infuse big ideas with personal meanings.”
    (transitive) To make something mobile. || (transitive) To assemble troops and their equipment in a coordinated fashion so as to be ready for war. || (intransitive) To become made ready for war.
    “Such visual adverts seek to mobilise hopes which their very existence has helped extinguish.”
    “He also hopes that it will help to mobilise and motivate increasingly disinterested voters into the polling booths.”
    “The Allies had to mobilise and utilise their large resources effectively on the battlefield and in the air.”
    简典