释义 |
Definition of perdure in English: perdureverb pəˈdjʊəpərˈd(y)o͝or [no object]US formal Remain in existence; endure. bell music has perdured in Venice throughout five centuries Example sentencesExamples - Certainly the romance of the Tortured Genius has perdured in modern Western art.
- Even worse is the widespread impression that Science produces as an output a generic ‘thing’ which perdures through time, be it called ‘knowledge’ or ‘information’ or epistemic virtue.
- While remnant systems perdured, the game was up for all of them - they were no longer alternatives to the dominant and victorious paradigm.
- The older nexus between self-improvement and traditional morality perdures as an undiminished factor in their worldview.
- This belief has perdured without question in the Catholic Church to this day, and is repeated almost verbatim in the Catechism of the Catholic Church.
Derivatives noun US formal Developmentally early induction often yields no clones at all, suggesting that the small clones depend on perdurance of wild-type gene product from the heterozygous clone precursor cell. Example sentencesExamples - But, clearly, the division between perdurance theories and endurance theories is somewhat unnatural, because ‘endurance’ theories differ so radically amongst themselves.
- However, it is equally possible that differences in allelic strength or perdurance of maternal contributions obscures the full range of phenotypes on the several components.
- It could be argued, however, that the lack of embryonic or larval phenotypes could be due to a long-lasting perdurance of maternal deposits during oogenesis.
- Natural selection will favor its perdurance, at least until and unless it outsmarts itself into extinction.
Origin Late 15th century: from Old French perdurer, from Latin perdurare 'endure', from per- 'through' + durare 'to last'. Definition of perdure in US English: perdureverbpərˈd(y)o͝or [no object]US formal Remain in existence throughout a substantial period of time; endure. bell music has perdured in Venice throughout five centuries Example sentencesExamples - This belief has perdured without question in the Catholic Church to this day, and is repeated almost verbatim in the Catechism of the Catholic Church.
- The older nexus between self-improvement and traditional morality perdures as an undiminished factor in their worldview.
- Certainly the romance of the Tortured Genius has perdured in modern Western art.
- Even worse is the widespread impression that Science produces as an output a generic ‘thing’ which perdures through time, be it called ‘knowledge’ or ‘information’ or epistemic virtue.
- While remnant systems perdured, the game was up for all of them - they were no longer alternatives to the dominant and victorious paradigm.
Origin Late 15th century: from Old French perdurer, from Latin perdurare ‘endure’, from per- ‘through’ + durare ‘to last’. |