statistic
英 [stə'tɪstɪk]
美 [stə'tɪstɪk]
英文词源
- statistic
- statistic: [18] The term statistics [18] etymologically denotes the ‘science of the state’. It comes from statisticus ‘of state affairs’, a modern Latin coinage based on classical Latin status (source of English state). It was the 18thcentury German political scientist Aschenwall who brought it (in German statistisch) into general usage, in the specific sense ‘of the collection and evaluation of data (particularly numerical data) relating to the study of the state and its functions and institutions’. By the 1830s it had broadened out into its modern general sense. English acquired the word from German.
=> state - statistic (n.)
- 1852, "one numerical statistic," see statistics. From 1939 in reference to a person (considered as nothing more than an example of some measured quantity).
双语例句
- 1. I'm statistic-phobic, and hopelessly ignorant of medicine.
- 我对统计数据感到恐惧,对药物一窍不通。
来自柯林斯例句
- 2. In practice this statistic suggests a few very large winners and a great many losers.
- 这一统计数表明实际上大赢家只是少数,而吃亏者却不乏其人.
来自英汉非文学 - 政府文件
- 3. In other words, an estimate is a specific observed value of a statistic.
- 就是说, 估计值是指统计量的一个具体观察值.
来自辞典例句
- 4. Isn't it a statistic concept by dominance?
- 不就是一个占主导地位的统计概念 么 ?
来自电影对白
- 5. Statistic process: Mann - Whitney Rank Sum Test, t - test, z - test.
- 统计学处理: 曼-怀氏等级和检验( Mann -WhitneyRank SumTest),t检验, z检验.
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