Dicţionar englez-român |
EPOCH
Pronunție (USA): | (GB): |
Traducere în limba română
epoch substantiv
1. epocă (în istorie, ştiinţă etc.);
to make an epoch a face epocă.
2. eră; perioadă, ev.
Exemple de propoziții și/sau fraze:
Activities in the same epoch but a different arm need not be similar in time and pattern.
(Clinical Trial Epoch, NCI Thesaurus/BRIDG)
But there was a higher and subtler chemistry of Nature, which, working with great forces over long epochs, might well produce results which were impossible for us.
(The Lost World, de Sir Arthur Conan Doyle)
But the latest ALMA observations push this epoch of massive-galaxy formation back further into the past, as the two galaxies were giants when the universe was only 780 million years old.
(Massive primordial galaxies found in ‘halo’ of dark matter, National Science Foundation)
This means that significant star formation began approximately 200 million years before the epoch at which the galaxy is being observed.
(Ancient Stardust Sheds Light on the First Stars, ESO)
EXAMPLE(S): A study designed to assess the effects of treatments might have 3 epochs.
(Clinical Trial Epoch, NCI Thesaurus/BRIDG)
The subject can only move to an epoch with a greater sequenceNumber.
(Clinical Trial Epoch, NCI Thesaurus/BRIDG)
Activities and activity results control the subject's movement from one epoch to another.
(Clinical Trial Epoch, NCI Thesaurus/BRIDG)
Each epoch serves a purpose in the trial as a whole, typically exposing the subject to a treatment or preparing them for a treatment, or gathering post-treatment data.
(Clinical Trial Epoch, NCI Thesaurus/BRIDG)