中英
evolves
  • 简明
  • 柯林斯
  • v.进化,演化;逐步发展,逐渐演变(evolve 的第三人称单数)
  • 高中/CET4/CET6/考研/IELTS/TOEFL/GRE/GMAT/SAT/商务英语/
  • 网络释义
  • 专业释义
  • 英英释义
  • 1

     进化卡

    进化卡 ( Evolves ) 分第一阶段(Stage 1) 进化卡 和第二阶段(Stage 2) 进化卡 , 要完成进化只需把特定 进化卡 放上口袋妖怪卡上即可。

  • 2

     进化

    ... 特殊能力(Pokemon Power) 进化(Evolves) 训练员(Trainer) ...

  • 3

     演变

    ... How is two and four? » 两个和4个是如何? evolves » 演变 where the act is reasonable » 该行为相当合理 ...

  • 4

     演化

    演化

短语
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  • 双语例句
  • 原声例句
  • 权威例句
  • 1
    This virus evolves rapidly.
    这种病毒会迅速演变。
  • 2
    Furthermore, UX evolves over time.
    此外,用户体验随着时间进化。
  • 3
    But as on the catwalks of Paris, style evolves.
    但在巴黎的猫步之下,风格不断演化。
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  • 词典短语
  • 百科
  • Evolves

    Evolution, also known as descent with modification, is the change in heritable phenotype traits of biological populations over successive generations. Evolutionary processes give rise to diversity at every level of biological organisation, including the level of species, individual organisms, and at the level of molecular evolution.All life on Earth originated through common descent from a last universal ancestor that lived approximately 3.5–3.8 billion years ago. Repeated formation of new species (speciation), change within species (anagenesis), and loss of species (extinction) throughout the evolutionary history of life on Earth can be inferred from shared sets of morphological and biochemical traits, including shared DNA sequences. These shared traits are more similar among species that share a more recent common ancestor, and can be used to reconstruct a biological "tree of life" based on evolutionary relationships (phylogenetics), using both existing species and the fossil record. Existing patterns of biodiversity have been shaped both by speciation and by extinction. Although more than 99 percent of all species that ever lived on the planet are estimated to be extinct, there are currently 10–14 million species of life on Earth.In the mid 19th century, Charles Darwin was the first to formulate an argument for the scientific theory of evolution by means of natural selection, published in his book On the Origin of Species (1859). Evolution by natural selection is a process inferred from three facts about populations: 1) more offspring are produced than can possibly survive, 2) traits vary among individuals, leading to different rates of survival and reproduction, and 3) trait differences are heritable. Thus, when members of a population die they are replaced by the progeny of parents better adapted to survive and reproduce in the biophysical environment in which natural selection takes place. This teleonomy is the quality whereby the process of natural selection creates and preserves traits that are seemingly fitted for the functional roles they perform. Natural selection is the only known cause of adaptation, but not the only known cause of evolution. Other, nonadaptive causes of microevolution include mutation and genetic drift.In the early 20th century the modern evolutionary synthesis integrated classical genetics with Darwin's theory of evolution by natural selection through the discipline of population genetics. The importance of natural selection as a cause of evolution was accepted into other branches of biology. Moreover, previously held notions about evolution, such as orthogenesis, evolutionism, and other beliefs about innate "progress" within the largest-scale trends in evolution, became obsolete scientific theories. Scientists continue to study various aspects of evolutionary biology by forming and testing hypotheses, constructing mathematical models of theoretical biology and biological theories, using observational data, and performing experiments in both the field and the laboratory. There is scientific consensus among biologists that descent with modification is one of the most reliably established of all the facts and theories in science. Discoveries in evolutionary biology have made a significant impact not just within the traditional branches of biology, but also in other academic disciplines (e.g., biological anthropology and evolutionary psychology) and on society at large.

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