As an adjectiveanticipated is expected to arrive; scheduled. As a nounpredictis a prediction. anticipated English Adjective (en adjective) expected to arrive; scheduled Verb (head) (anticipate) predict English (wikipedia predict) Alternative forms ...
preˈdictableadjective (negativeunpredictable) able to be foretold.His anger was predictable.predecible,previsible preˈdiction(-ʃən)noun I'm making no predictions about the result of the race.predicción,pronóstico Kernerman English Multilingual Dictionary © 2006-2013 K Dictionaries Ltd. ...
The focus of this study was the event 'doing very poorly on an important exam.' Two days before taking their midterm in an introductory psychology class, 164 students rated 120 life events as to the degree of negative impact on their life they believed the event did have (if it previously...
or increase it’s revenues or do any such thing. By then, at least to some of us, it had become clear, the company had no roadmap, and it was just following an instinctive reaction, trying to keep its neck above water for as long as possible, at any expense. Tumblr – A billion ...
Furthermore, gaps in prior icon design theories are exposed regarding predictors of icon successfulness in terms the adjective pairs Concrete–Abstract and Complex–Simple, as no consistent statistically significant effect was found among them in our study. 2. Background 2.1. Graphical presentation in...
To investigate whether performance on different figure-ground tasks explain similar (overlapping) or different variance in speech-in-babble performance, we conducted a hierarchical stepwise regression with the figure-ground tasks as predictor variables. Thresholds on the same-frequency figure-ground discrimi...
(such as avatars of other humans and/or noise from the environment) thus increasing the realism of the assessment context. An increasing number of VEs like virtual classrooms, virtual shopping centres or cities have been developed to measure cognitive functions such as attention, executive ...
An interesting trend is shown between the months of July, August, September and October. More questions get asked and more questions get closed. Perhaps this is due to the beginning of the Fall semester? Year Hide # Convert date format to yearstrain$Year <-year(as.Date(dates,format ="%m...
(tr; may take a clause as object) to state or make a declaration about in advance, esp on a reasoned basis; foretell [C17: from Latinpraedīcereto mention beforehand, frompraebefore +dīcereto say] preˈdictableadj preˌdictaˈbility,preˈdictablenessn ...
This study puts the usage-based assumption that our linguistic knowledge is based on usage to the test. To do so, we explore individual variation in speakers’ language use as established based on corpus data – both in terms of frequency of use (as a pr