polarize
polarize 英 [ˈpəʊləraɪz] 美 [ˈpoʊləraɪz]
vt. (使)极化;(使)偏振;(使)两极分化 vi. 极化;偏振;两极分化
进行时:polarizing 过去式:polarized 过去分词:polarized 第三人称单数:polarizes
- To polarize is to divide. Something that's been polarized has been split into two sides that are so different, it seems as though they're from opposite ends of the earth — like the North Pole and the South Pole.
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- vt. (使)极化;(使)偏振;(使)两极分化
- vi. 极化;偏振;两极分化
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1. But most people never polarize.
但大多数人从来不曾极化过。
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2. What if you don’t want to polarize?
要是你不想极化会怎么样?
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3. When voltage is applied to a dielectric, an electrostatic field is created. The atoms within the material polarize, enabling the capacitor to store energy that can be quickly released on demand.
当电压施加在绝缘材料上,会产生一个静电场,电场极化材料内部的原子,使电容器能够储存能量。
- polarize (v.) 1811, in optics, from French polariser, coined by French physicist Étienne-Louis Malus (1775-1812) as a term in optics, from Modern Latin polaris "polar" (see polar). Transferred sense of "to accentuate a division in a group or system" is first recorded 1949 in Arthur Koestler. Related: Polarized; polarizing.
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