单词 | reliability |
释义 | reliablere‧li‧a‧ble /rɪˈlaɪəbəl/ ●●○ AWL adjective Examples EXAMPLES FROM OTHER DICTIONARIES Thesaurus
THESAURUSpeople► trustworthy Collocations especially written if someone is trustworthy, you can trust them because they are honest: · Many people do not see politicians as trustworthy. ► reliable someone who is reliable can be trusted to do what they say they will do and not make any mistakes: · a reliable employee· We need someone who is 100% reliable. ► responsible someone who is responsible can be trusted to behave in a sensible way: · Sam’s a good babysitter – he’s responsible and the kids like him.· a responsible adult ► dependable someone who is dependable can be trusted to do what you need or expect: · Britain is our most dependable ally. ► steady someone who is steady is sensible and you can depend on them: · He’s only sixteen, but he’s steady and reliable. ► loyal someone who is loyal can be trusted to always give help or support to their friends, their country, their political party etc: · She is fiercely loyal to her family.· He is one of the party’s most loyal supporters. ► faithful someone who is faithful stays loyal to a person, belief, political party etc, and continues to support them, even in difficult situations: · Daniel had been a faithful friend.· a faithful member of the Communist Party ► can rely/depend on somebody if you can rely or depend on someone, you can be sure that they will do what you want or need them to do: · Don’t worry about a thing – you can depend on me.· Patients rely on doctors to help them make the right decisions about their health care. things► reliable/dependable able to be trusted to do what you want, or to be accurate: · The Boeing is a very reliable plane.· a dependable supply of oil· reliable economic forecasts· How can we be sure that his evidence is reliable? ► trustworthy if something is trustworthy, you know that it is true or accurate: · a trustworthy source of information· a trustworthy guide ► can rely/depend on something if you can rely or depend on something, you can be sure that they will do what you want or need them to do: · I need a car that I can rely on in all weathers. people► trustworthy especially written if someone is trustworthy, you can trust them because they are honest: · Many people do not see politicians as trustworthy. ► reliable someone who is reliable can be trusted to do what they say they will do and not make any mistakes: · a reliable employee· We need someone who is 100% reliable. ► responsible someone who is responsible can be trusted to behave in a sensible way: · Sam’s a good babysitter – he’s responsible and the kids like him.· a responsible adult ► dependable someone who is dependable can be trusted to do what you need or expect: · Britain is our most dependable ally. ► steady someone who is steady is sensible and you can depend on them: · He’s only sixteen, but he’s steady and reliable. ► loyal someone who is loyal can be trusted to always give help or support to their friends, their country, their political party etc: · She is fiercely loyal to her family.· He is one of the party’s most loyal supporters. ► faithful someone who is faithful stays loyal to a person, belief, political party etc, and continues to support them, even in difficult situations: · Daniel had been a faithful friend.· a faithful member of the Communist Party ► can rely/depend on somebody if you can rely or depend on someone, you can be sure that they will do what you want or need them to do: · Don’t worry about a thing – you can depend on me.· Patients rely on doctors to help them make the right decisions about their health care. things► reliable/dependable able to be trusted to do what you want, or to be accurate: · The Boeing is a very reliable plane.· a dependable supply of oil· reliable economic forecasts· How can we be sure that his evidence is reliable? ► trustworthy if something is trustworthy, you know that it is true or accurate: · a trustworthy source of information· a trustworthy guide ► can rely/depend on something if you can rely or depend on something, you can be sure that they will do what you want or need them to do: · I need a car that I can rely on in all weathers. Longman Language Activatoralways effective► reliable · The system is new, but so far it seems to be reliable.a reliable way/method etc of doing something · Eating sensibly and taking regular exercise is a fairly reliable method of losing weight.· In Africa, cellular phones are often the only reliable way of communicating. ► surefire certain to be effective or successful: · Thursday night's line-up includes such surefire attractions as 'The Simpsons' and 'Friends'.a surefire way to do something/of doing something: · I know a surefire way to get a car started on a freezing winter morning.a surefire solution to something: · There's no surefire solution to the problem of improving the company's performance.a surefire recipe for success/disaster (=something that is certain to be successful or not successful): · Going on holiday with my parents would be a surefire recipe for disaster. ► foolproof a method, system, or plan that is foolproof is always effective, because it is simple to understand and operate, and cannot go wrong: · I thought this method was foolproof until four customer orders went missing.· Each article goes through a foolproof system of checking which ensures that there are no mistakes in the final text.a foolproof way to do something/of doing something: · There's no foolproof way to judge whether someone is the right person for the job. ► infallible a method or system that is infallible always produces the right result and never goes wrong: · Banks claim their cash-dispensing computers are infallible.an infallible way to do something/of doing something: · There is no infallible way of predicting exactly what the weather will be like. ► never fails/can't fail/works every time spoken use this to tell someone that a method is always effective, especially when you have used it successfully before: · It's a very simple technique, but it never fails.· If I'm having trouble sleeping, having a hot bath at night works every time.· You should try this recipe. It's so easy that you can't fail. something you can trust► reliable a reliable machine, system etc always works well; reliable information, books etc do not contain mistakes and are likely to be correct: · Do you have a reliable map of the area?· My car's quite old, but it's still pretty reliable.· In those days there was no reliable system of transportation between Alaska and the rest of the US. ► can rely/depend on something if you can depend on something or can rely on it, you can be sure that it will always work well: · You can depend on the postal service here. It's very good.· If we can rely on the weather report, it's going to be hot tomorrow.· Of course people will use their cars if they cannot depend on buses and trains to get them to work. when you can be sure that someone will do what you want► can depend/rely on somebody if you can depend on someone or can rely on them, you can be sure that they will do what you want or need them to do: · It's going to be a stressful time - you'll need to have someone with you who you can depend on.can depend/rely on sb to do something: · We knew we could rely on Tom to bring some good music. ► reliable someone who is reliable can be trusted to do what they say they will do and not make any mistakes: · It's strange Ben isn't here. He's usually so reliable.· In many offices the most reliable people with the longest service are the secretaries. ► responsible someone who is responsible can be trusted to behave in a sensible way, so you do not need to worry that they will do something careless or stupid: · We never worried about letting Sam babysit our kids - he'd always seemed very responsible and intelligent. · He treated me as if I wasn't responsible enough to be given the tools to do my job.responsible behaviour/decisions etc: · Two new programs are being developed to help promote responsible sexual behavior. ► loyal someone who is loyal can be trusted to always give help or support to their friends, their country, their political party etc: · a loyal supporter of the Green Party· She was described as a loyal friend of the Princess.loyal to: · Although they continue to argue, she remains fiercely loyal to her mother. COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES► reliable data Word family· Some of the data isn’t very reliable. ► an accurate/reliable estimate (=fairly exact)· It’s hard to put an accurate estimate on the number of people affected. ► reliable/credible evidence (=which people can trust or believe)· Do you think their evidence is reliable? ► reliable method (=likely to give the result you want)· We need a more reliable method of predicting earthquakes. ► a reliable report· On Sunday there were reliable reports of a group of whales off the Devon coast. COLLOCATIONS FROM THE CORPUSADVERB► always· The figures used are not always reliable indicators.· They were not always reliable and often blew up the wrong targets.· Unfortunately, the information is not always reliable.· Our imagination is not always reliable.· Despite its sensitivity, it is not always reliable. ► as· Suffice to say, no one has proved as reliable a forecaster as Joseph.· Making butter was nowhere near as reliable.· We need to ensure that the power plant and drive train are as reliable as possible.· This is, however, no reason to avoid making them as reliable as possible.· This makes these techniques difficult to use as reliable absolute dating methods. ► completely· A useful but not completely reliable indicator of potency.· He is an honest, warm human as well as an excellent, completely reliable guide.· But whatever form intuition takes, it is completely reliable.· Taken singly none is completely reliable.· A few rules can be given, though these are not completely reliable.· This process is not completely reliable, introducing further difficulty into the recognition procedure. ► highly· Its extremely low rating suggests that the answers given were open, honest and highly reliable.· Verio supports its operations with highly reliable and scalable national infrastructure and systems including a facilities-based Tier One national network. ► how· But how reliable is demonstrative identification?· She is pleasant enough but how reliable I can not say and I am not depending on her for the birth.· Three technical issues have to be considered first: How reliable does the system have to be?· How do we know how reliable it is?· A flushed and jolly character raises his glass among friends and family - how real, how reliable is that evidence? ► less· The glow from a thousand points of light seems less reliable than that from the lightbulbs of a well-financed bureaucracy.· Trend data on employment and economic activity rates for women are less reliable, particularly given their low unemployment registration rates.· It's much smaller than its competitors in Bath or Cheltenham, and it's far less reliable than them.· An expansionary monetary policy is even less reliable.· It was rumoured that as the monarch's virility grew less reliable he developed a habit of taking substantial quantities of aphrodisiacs.· If the latter were true, random sampling of the normal mucosa would be less reliable as a means of ascertaining risk.· In this respect the task is bigger, less reliable in its outcome, and in need of much greater definition.· Once it has been damaged, the Steam Tank becomes increasingly less reliable. ► more· These computers were smaller than the first-generation machines, were cheaper to run, and were much more reliable.· We need better computer models and more reliable climate data before we take any drastic countermeasures. 3.· The perceived value of the statement is that its standardisation makes comparisons between companies and industries more reliable.· The attorney general's figures are considered more reliable because his office determines the actual cause of death.· The weather improved and the pitch, if anything, afforded slightly more reliable bounce on the second day.· Windows 95 users have a newer and more reliable program called DriveSpace.· Friendly persuasion A more reliable test is whether a fruit comes away from the plant without much persuasion.· The newer, more reliable tests which have been introduced since publication of the first edition are also described and depicted. ► most· The most reliable of these comparative data measure voting in national elections.· He was the most reliable, in spite of that old dragon he married.· You know what we need to guarantee the safest, most reliable means of air travel humanly, technologically possible?· The most reliable way to press anything is always to dismantle it completely.· In many offices the most reliable people with the longest track record in a company are secretaries.· The overlay process has been most reliable here.· The most reliable and accurate estimates can normally be obtained using one of the true cross-areal interpolation methods. ► very· Bovine in vitro fertilisation was developed in the 1990S, and is still not very reliable.· The M14 was very reliable and durable, single shot or auto.· Despite its peculiarities, the car was very reliable.· They are not very reliable and it is a rare day when all eight can be persuaded to run!· The practice is quite widespread, but no one has achieved any very reliable estimate of its scale, let alone a trend.· The engine had to be very reliable with the smallest number of parts possible.· Battery Test Many detectors have an integral battery test but this is not very reliable, to say the least.· Incidentally I got that information on the third law from a very reliable source. NOUN► data· Having reliable data for the current year is, of course, a prerequisite of good budgets.· They chose us to provide them with the most reliable data network available.· Effective planning for mission in Britain as in many other countries has been hampered at every level by lack of reliable data.· Diagrams can take perfectly reliable data and through over simplification deliberately or unintentionally mislead.· Day attributes the changes to more detailed and reliable data collection, together with better statistical techniques.· More reliable data for the metal workers, the most powerful sector, show only 20-25 percent unionization.· However, wealth is perhaps even more difficult to measure than income and reliable data prove elusive.· On the other hand, occasional sampling, while less time-consuming, will give less reliable data. ► estimate· Sampling theory showed that reliable estimates of population characteristics could be arrived at using appropriately constructed samples.· Quite sophisticated equipment and trained manpower is required to make reliable estimates.· The practice is quite widespread, but no one has achieved any very reliable estimate of its scale, let alone a trend.· Second, how can we be sure that it provides for an accurate and reliable estimate of that population?· Better designed studies with more complete reporting of data would enable more reliable estimates of efficacy of treatment. ► evidence· Nevertheless, the most reliable evidence strongly suggests that the children of the war are suffering from secondhand exposure to the toxin.· He proposed that a prosecution should not be embarked upon or continued unless the prosecutors were satisfied there was reliable evidence. ► guide· The numbers could still be a reliable guide to a player's position even with all the playing formations these days.· Actually, neither is a reliable guide.· None the less, the earth's magnetic field is a much more reliable guide.· In the history of science, beauty has proved itself a reliable guide to truth.· For there, waiting on the platform, would be our ever reliable guide, philosopher and friend, Sam Davies.· He is an honest, warm human as well as an excellent, completely reliable guide.· That is why they are a more reliable guide to completeness.· The only reliable guide to that is the demand at present. ► indicator· A useful but not completely reliable indicator of potency.· The figures used are not always reliable indicators.· Most agree that measures used in combination provide much more reliable indicators of performance.· Pseudomelanosis coli is regarded as a more reliable indicator of chronic anthranoid laxative abuse of more than nine to 12 months.· Cotinine in the urine is a reliable indicator that the subject has been exposed to passive smoking.· It can be argued that these tests are a reliable indicator of performance when tested under controlled conditions.· Matthew Lynn Number of employees provides a reliable indicator of a company's performance over the short term. ► information· My first task was trying to acquire some reliable information about the nomads.· His starting price of 11-8 made it clear he was strongly fancied by somebody with reliable information.· A: To get the most reliable information, consult a travel agent who has access to continually updated fare information.· By providing reliable information on military activity, satellite surveillance could cut out the uncertainty which fuels arms spending.· However it isn't easy to get reliable information on what to give, and when. ► means· New scientific techniques introduced among other things reliable means of dating the prehistoric past.· And still no ship owned a reliable means for establishing her whereabouts.· Chemiluminescence is a reliable means of estimating reactive oxygen species in biological media.· You know what we need to guarantee the safest, most reliable means of air travel humanly, technologically possible?· If we had no rights of participation in the subsequent investigation, we would have no reliable means of obtaining the information. ► measure· Reliability Any instrument used in language assessments needs to provide reliable measures.· Weener etal. conclude that, although the overall score does provide a reliable measure, it is of questionable validity. ► method· One of the difficulties in the early stages of this work was to find any reasonably reliable method of measuring whisker strengths.· Hence if knowledge requires an infallible or perfectly reliable method, it is impossible.· If you're not pregnant, ask a doctor about reliable methods of contraception. 5.· Freezing and canning can be reliable methods of preserving foods but the cook-chill method is inadequately regulated.· If you're in this business, you go after a reasonably cheap, reliable method.· Direct studies on cell function are rare due to lack of reliable methods to culture this epithelium.· The only reliable method of preventing parasitic bronchitis is to immunise all young calves with lungworm vaccine.· Psychology's theoretical inadequacies often lead it to replace theory with utilitarian generalizations from its most reliable methods. ► result· If you are looking for well-being, you might get more reliable results if you choose a life of radical selfishness.· It is important that assessment methodologies which will provide valid and reliable results are developed at an early stage. ► source· The process continues until a solid body of successful generalizations has been established to serve as a reliable source of explanations.· She will likely have young children at home and no reliable source of day care.· Use them only in accordance with the manufacturer's instructions or advice from a reliable source.· But what more reliable source of recovery do we have than our own body?· It is therefore not apriori certain that literature is a reliable source of information about anything but its own language.· But can I count as a reliable source my own childhood memories?· Incidentally I got that information on the third law from a very reliable source.· A reliable source had eluded him, although certain other prospects had yet to be properly investigated. ► way· The most reliable way to press anything is always to dismantle it completely.· Is there a reliable way to measure the intelligence of the gut brain?· There is no single reliable way of deciding by simple observations whether a subject is genuinely hypnotised.· The root of materialism is probably a firm commitment to empirical scientific method as the only reliable way to discover truth.· It is only good for learning weights, and weights are not always a reliable way to resolve conflicts.· There is no fully reliable way to separate the compensation for these two components.· To say however that this route supplies the only reliable way to knowledge is grossly to overstep its boundaries.· Thus the search for a reliable way to detect or even predict ovarian cancer goes on. ► witness· Certainly women sat spinning upon them as we know from the description by Adam Sedgwick, a reliable witness. WORD FAMILYnounreliabilityrelianceadjectivereliable ≠ unreliablereliantverbrelyadverbreliably someone or something that is reliable can be trusted or depended on SYN dependable → rely: a birth control method that is cheap and reliable Miller was a quiet and reliable man.—reliably adverb—reliability /rɪˌlaɪəˈbɪləti/ noun [uncountable] |
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