Online Google Dictionary

chained 中文解釋 wordnet sense Collocation Usage Collins Definition
Verb
/CHān/,
Font size:

chained, past participle; chaining, present participle; chained, past tense; chains, 3rd person singular present;
  1. Fasten or secure with a chain
    • - she chained her bicycle to the railing
  2. Confine with a chain
    • - he had been chained up
    • - as an actuary you will not be chained to a desk

  1. bound with chains; "enchained demons strained in anger to gnaw on his bones"; "prisoners in chains"
  2. Chained is a 1934 motion picture directed by Clarence Brown, and starring Joan Crawford, Clark Gable and Otto Kruger. ...
  3. "Chained" is a 1968 single released by soul singer Marvin Gaye on the Tamla label.
  4. The following is a list of episodes of the television series NCIS. The program and its characters were introduced in a two-part episode of the CBS television series JAG in April 2003. The show premiered on September 23, 2003 in the United States on CBS. ...
  5. New York City Subway chaining is a method to precisely specify locations along the New York City Subway lines. ...
  6. Chained is a swimsuit line designed by Ryan Starr, which is currently in pre-production. According to InStyle Magazine, Starr signed a contract with Lord and Taylor to release her line when it is complete. ...
  7. (Chainage) A chain is a unit of length; it measures 66 feet or 22 yards or 100 links (20.1168m). There are 10 chains in a furlong, and 80 chains in one statute mile. An acre is the area of 10 square chains (that is, an area of one chain by one furlong). ...
  8. (chainage) An imaginary line used to measure distance, often corresponding to the centre of a straight road; A distance measured along such a line
  9. (chaining) The act or process by which something is chained
  10. (Chainage) A length measured by means of a chain or steel tape.
  11. (Chainage) In road design, when the alignment is created, the points on it are given chainage values. Each point on the alignment is given a value which is a linear distance along the curve, from a given starting point.
  12. (chaining) A method for relaying requests to another server. Results for the request are collected, compiled, and then returned to the client.
  13. (chaining) A method of linking multiple ISA Server computers together. Individual ISA Server and proxy computers or any combination can be chained. Communication is in an upstream, hierarchical order.
  14. (Chaining) linking together distinct component skills to form a more complex skill
  15. (Chaining) A procedure in which responses are reinforced in sequence to form more complex behaviors that ultimately occur as a single cohesive performance.
  16. (Chaining) A teaching procedure whereby a task analysis is conducted, breaking down skills into their smallest components, and then 'chained' together to teach an entire skill. Total task, forward, and backward chaining are techniques frequently used in teaching a new skill.
  17. (Chaining) A technique used to strengthen new behaviors. It involves the identification of a set (i.e., chain) of stimulus-response links and having the subject perform them from the beginning of the chain to the end, over and over again.
  18. (Chaining) An instructional technique that transforms a learned response into a stimulus for the next desired response.
  19. (Chaining) Examination of a concrete road surface by dragging chains on the road to discover hollow spots or damage beneath the surface.
  20. (Chaining) I am vehemently opposed to chaining.  I used it in Heroes because you HAD to in order to get through the Barbarian Hordes mission, but I like the way heroes IV treats movement. ...
  21. (Chaining) In ABA-based interventions, the combining of simple, component behaviors into a more complex, composite behavior. See also forward chaining and backward chaining.
  22. (Chaining) In the context of indexing, calculating the index number of any period relative to the base period as the final product of the multiplication of the changes between consecutive periods from the base period to the period for which the index number is calculated. ...
  23. (Chaining) Method of skidding pulpwood on short, steep slopes by wrapping a chain around several bunches of wood and dragging them crosswise down the slope (8).
  24. (Chaining) The process in which each step of a sequence is taught individually and then each step is chained together to achieve the complex task that is being taught.  The steps can either be forward or backward chained.
  25. (Chaining) The process of flattening vegetation (usually mallee or scrub) by dragging a heavy chain or cable between two large tractors or bulldozers.