amplitude
amplitude — 名詞
1. in physics, how far a wave, signal, or swinging object moves away from its resti
振幅
波或振動偏離靜止位置的最大距離
in physics, how far a wave, signal, or swinging object moves away from its resting line at its highest or lowest point — for example, a louder sound or a stronger radio signal has greater amplitude.
The amplitude of the sound wave doubled when Nikolai turned the speaker up.
Nikolai 把喇叭轉大聲後,聲波的振幅增為兩倍。
the amplitude of [wave]
Engineers measured the amplitude of the radio signal at the top of the tower.
工程師在塔頂測量無線電訊號的振幅。
measure the amplitude of [signal]
As the pendulum swung more slowly, its amplitude grew smaller and smaller.
鐘擺愈擺愈慢,振幅也愈來愈小。
Earthquakes are ranked partly by the amplitude of the shaking shown on the seismograph.
地震的等級部分是依地震儀上震動的振幅來判定。
Dr. Xander asked the students to draw a wave with high frequency but low amplitude.
田中博士請學生畫出一條高頻率但低振幅的波。
文法句型
the amplitude of [wave/signal]
用法筆記
Subject is usually a wave, signal, vibration, or swinging object. Often paired with 'frequency' in physics contexts; the two describe different properties of the same wave.
常見錯誤
2. a great deal of something, especially the wide reach or richness of an abstract
廣度;豐富
知識、視野或情感等的廣闊與豐厚
a great deal of something, especially the wide reach or richness of an abstract quality such as knowledge, vision, or feeling.
Professor Liu writes with an amplitude of vision few historians can match.
劉教授寫作時展現的視野廣度,少有歷史學家能比。
amplitude of vision (formal)
The novel impressed critics with its amplitude of feeling and warm humour.
這本小說以情感的豐厚與溫暖的幽默感打動了評論家。
amplitude of feeling
Zara brought to the project an amplitude of knowledge gained from thirty years on the job.
Zara 為這個專案帶來三十年累積的廣博知識。
Tova's early poems already showed an amplitude of imagination unusual for a teenager.
Tova 早期的詩作就展現出同齡少女罕見的豐沛想像力。
- scarcity
the opposite — a noticeable lack of something
- narrowness
opposite when amplitude refers to range or scope
文法句型
amplitude of [abstract noun]
用法筆記
Distinct from sense 1: this sense is uncountable and abstract, never about waves or measurable physical motion. Mostly limited to literary or academic prose; in everyday speech, 'plenty', 'wealth', or 'breadth' sound more natural.