• What you might have expected would be the children would then use whatever system their adults use, but they don't.

    你可能会认为儿童会使用,成人所使用的语言系统,但事实并非如此

    耶鲁公开课 - 心理学导论课程节选

  • because we'd have different sleep times and then sometimes I would sleep loud and she... you know.

    因为我们睡觉的时间不一样,有时候我睡觉的声音大,她就会……你懂得。

    与室友和睦相处 - SpeakingMax英语口语达人

  • So then, I could say that the average valence electron energy for oxygen would then be, I've got two s electrons.

    所以,我可以说,氧的平均价电子能,就是,以我得到的两个s轨道的电子来算。

    麻省理工公开课 - 固态化学导论课程节选

  • Then the design was that, when you reached retirement age, you would then get funds from the government for the rest of your life--your retirement funds.

    接下来是这样设计的,当你退休的时候,你就能得到政府的资助,供你安享晚年,这就是养老金。

    耶鲁公开课 - 金融市场课程节选

  • Because in doing that, Python would then have a value that it could pass on into some other part of a computation, and if it wasn't what I wanted, I might be a long ways downstream in the computation before I actually hit some result that makes no sense.

    因为如果这样做的话,Python会将,输入的值传递到下面的,一些运算中去,如果这个值的类型不是我想要的,我可能会在得到,一个毫无意义的结果之前,经历一个很长时间的,计算过程。

    麻省理工公开课 - 计算机科学及编程导论课程节选

  • But then who would understand better than John Milton, Sr. the importance or the value of a long-term investment strategy?

    但在那时谁又比弥尔顿先生更懂得,长远投资的重要性呢?

    耶鲁公开课 - 弥尔顿课程节选

  • f truth is the recognition of the systematic character of a certain kind of error, then it would be fully dependent on the prior existence of this error.

    如果真理是,对一种错误的系统化字符的认可,那么它会完全依赖于这个错误的先前存在。

    耶鲁公开课 - 文学理论导论课程节选

  • and then you would wait two seconds or so and then you would see a target, presented very rapidly.

    然后你会等待大约两秒钟,的时间,之后你会看到一个目标,显示得非常快。

    斯坦福公开课 - 7个颠覆你思想的演讲课程节选

  • In particular, we just argued that if everyone in the room chose a 100, then 67 would be a winning strategy.

    准确的说,我们仅仅论证了,如果教室里每个人都选择100,那选择67会获胜

    耶鲁公开课 - 博弈论课程节选

  • Now, if that potential changed and it stayed changed forever, then the cell would never go back to its resting state.

    如果电势变化并且不再恢复到原始电势,细胞就永远不会回到静息状态

    耶鲁公开课 - 生物医学工程探索课程节选

  • Insofar as it deprives you of a future that would have been bad, then death's not actually bad, it's actually good.

    当它夺走你的,苦难的未来时,那么死亡其实不是坏事而是好事。

    耶鲁公开课 - 死亡课程节选

  • Right, this makes a lot of sense because if the entire atom was made up of nuclei, then we would have 100% probability of hitting one of these nuclei and having things bounce back.

    因为如果整个原子,都是原子核,那我们就有100%概率,撞到一个原子核并被弹回来,所以如果我们。

    麻省理工公开课 - 化学原理课程节选

  • Then would you be satisfied that this is the right way of thinking about the question?

    这样你就满意了吗,这样思考这个问题就可以了吗?

    耶鲁公开课 - 公正课程节选

  • So the whole piece,then,would be a piece involving irregular rate of change-- the entire piece.

    所以整首歌曲中和声都有不规则的改变-,整首歌曲都是。

    耶鲁公开课 - 聆听音乐课程节选

  • They're the ones who would seek out high fat, high sugar diets because then they would get calories to seek out a variety of food, to eat in--eat above what immediate hunger might dictate.

    这些人追求高脂高糖饮食,以获得足够能量,继而寻找更多种食物,饥饿驱使他们吃可以迅速果腹的食品

    耶鲁公开课 - 关于食物的心理学、生物学和政治学课程节选

  • Then would come the battle.

    接下来便是战斗环节

    耶鲁公开课 - 古希腊历史简介课程节选

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