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instantaneously    音标拼音: [,ɪnstənt'æniəsli]
ad. 即时地

即时地

instantaneously
adv 1: without any delay; "he was killed outright" [synonym:
{instantaneously}, {outright}, {instantly}, {in a flash}]

Instantaneous \In`stan*ta"ne*ous\, a. [Cf. F. instantan['e].]
[1913 Webster]
1. Done or occurring in an instant, or without any
perceptible duration of time; as, the passage of
electricity appears to be instantaneous.
[1913 Webster]

His reason saw
With instantaneous view, the truth of things.
--Thomson.
[1913 Webster]

2. At or during a given instant; as, instantaneous
acceleration, velocity, etc.
[1913 Webster]

{Instantaneous center of rotation} (Kinematics), in a plane
or in a plane figure which has motions both of translation
and of rotation in the plane, is the point which for the
instant is at rest.

{Instantaneous axis of rotation} (Kinematics), in a body
which has motions both of translation and rotation, is a
line, which is supposed to be rigidly united with the
body, and which for the instant is at rest. The motion of
the body is for the instant simply that of rotation about
the instantaneous axis. -- {In`stan*ta"ne*ous*ly}, adv. --
{In`stan*ta"ne*ous*ness}, n.
[1913 Webster]


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  • adverbs - Difference between instantly and instantaneously . . .
    Instantaneously means happening so soon (in relation to something else) that no delay is perceptible The difference between these adverbs is subtle, and there is plenty of gray area between them, but careful writers keep them separate Instantly is synonymous with immediately, but instantaneously is closer to with little delay
  • Instant vs. instantaneous - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    0 "Instantaneous" has significantly more immediacy associated with it than "instant" If you shift them to adverb form, the difference is even more evident Consider these two sentences: -- The spark jumped between the two electrodes instantaneously -- Upon receiving news of a moose down by the swamp, the hunter set off immediately
  • word choice - Instantly vs instantaneously - English Language . . .
    Perhaps Difference between instantly and instantaneously is the question you looked at; and while it sounds like a duplicate it might not be However, the example in the older question When should I use instant vs instantaneous makes your question a duplicate
  • meaning - Why is the definite article used in: ”What happened to the . . .
    (It's mind boggling to think that this calculation is something we do as interlocutors almost instantaneously, yet attempting to reason out and describe why the calculation is logical has taken me hours of pondering) In this case, of the soup modifies the rest and that we ate yesterday modifies the soup So in the basic form "What happened to X?"
  • What is a word meaning a non-instantaneous event?
    An idealized mathematical notion of an instantaneous event has no duration That is the meaning which is already attached to the word "event" in the domain I'm working in Programs are, as your definition indicated, "planned", which is narrower than the meaning I'm going for Not all events are planned, they can simply be things which happen and are measured, e g an earthquake "Process" is
  • The verb for love at first sight (idiom or word)
    The verb for love at first sight (idiom or word) that is loving or liking them nearly instantly Love at first sight is an experience and therefore a noun I wonder if there's a verb close to, if
  • A word for something that used to be unique but is now so commonplace . . .
    'Ubiquitous' is largely synonymous with 'commonplace' and is poor stylistically in most sentences using both 'Commonplace' is actually the more appropriate word to use here; it is more natural-sounding (in almost all contexts), and here invokes the 'familiarity has bred contempt' notion far better Note that your 'used to be unique' constraint makes the answer 'ubiquitous' incorrect
  • grammaticality - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    I don't think, on the other hand, that I'm looking out the window is allowed in British English: the prepositional use of out is confined (traditionally) to other English-speaking areas These anomalies are given prominence by the fact that we're nowadays communicating virtually instantaneously over the web
  • What is it called when you buy something for free?
    Why my downvote? Because single-word-requirest that paint themselves into a corner (e g it must be a single noun or a single verb) or that ask for a word which must meet an impossible condition (buying something for free) or that are too particular in the set of requirements (a word for the sense of surprise you feel when someone you don't know is knocking at the door after sunset) are
  • run-down versus rundown - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    In The Complete Poems of Anna Akhmatova by Judith Hemschemeyer, we read: In this everyday gray dress, On rundown heels I thought that quot;rundown quot; was a substantive and quot;run-down q





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