constitutive
constitutive 英 ['kɒnstɪtjuːtɪv] 美 [,kɑnstə'tutɪv]
adj. 基本的;本质的;制定的;构成分子的
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- adj. 基本的;本质的;制定的;构成分子的
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1. So political philosophy is not just some kind of strange historical appendage attached to the trunk of political science; it is constitutive of its deepest problems.
所以政治哲学并非只是,奇怪的历史附属,依挂在政治科学的大主干上;,它是其最深层问题的本质。
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2. The lesson still to be fully learned from this crisis is that markets and states are always and everywhere mutually overlapping, constitutive, antagonistic, and generative.
有待于从这场危机中充分吸取的教训是:市场和政府时时处处都是相互重叠、不可或缺、相互排斥、并具备生成能力。
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3. They emerge around constitutive moments, moments that only happen once, around whose memory meanings cluster.
他们唯有出现在这样的时刻,那些只此一次,回忆中意味着团聚的时刻。
- constitutive (adj.) c. 1600, "having the power of establishing," also "elemental, essential," from Medieval Latin *constitutivus, from constitut-, past-participle stem of constituere "to cause to stand, set up, fix, place, establish, set in order," from assimilated form of com-, here probably an intensive prefix (see com-), + statuere "to set," from PIE root *sta- "to stand, make or be firm." Related: Constitutively.
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