also called ovarian low malignant potential tumor. 例文帳に追加 「ovarian low malignant potential tumor(卵巣低悪性度腫瘍)」とも呼ばれる。 - PDQ®がん用語辞書 英語版 potential changes in paramecium 例文帳に追加 ゾウリムシの潜在的変化 - Weblio Email例文集
Tokio, who did not feel like taking her as his disciple at first, came to expect her potentiality as he exchanged letters with Yoshiko, thus she became his disciple and moved to Tokyo. 発音を聞く 例文帳に追加 始めは気の進まなかった時雄であったが、芳子と手紙をやりとりするうちにその将来性を見込み、師弟関係を結び芳子は上京して ...
the difference in electrical charge between two points in a circuit expressed in volts ボルトで現わされる回路内の2点間の電位の差 上位語 electrical phenomenon 下位語 evoked potential, resting potential
Why is citizen used to describe an inhabitant of a country when the word is derived from the Latin for city (civitas) and originally meant a city dweller? Wouldn’t the nouns derived from ‘country...
etymology - Why is the inhabitant of a country called a “citizen ...
A citizen of the United States is a legal resident who has been processed by the government as being a member of the United States. A denizen of the United States is simply someone that lives there.
28 There is a suffix that is written only as -ize in American English and often -ise in British English (but not always, as ShreevatsaR points out in the comments). This suffix attaches to a large number of words, thus the s/z alternation shows up in a large number of words. Citizen does not have the -ize/-ise suffix.
By analogy with U.S. citizen, you think you can say China citizen, but Chinese citizen blocks it. U.S. citizen is different either because it predates American citizen or it means something different. e.g., it's shorthand for the legal term "citizen of the United States" (see below).