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单词 affinity
释义

Definition of affinity in English:

affinity

nounPlural affinities əˈfɪnɪtiəˈfɪnədi
  • 1A natural liking for and understanding of someone or something.

    he had a special affinity with horses
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Dolphins have a natural affinity with humans and just being with them, playing with them and touching them, is credited with bringing about wondrous results for sick people.
    • The natural affinity between these two just seems to be a fact.
    • He was born with a natural affinity for the outdoors: he loved the mountains and rivers, as well as the forests and farms, birds, insects, wolves and bears.
    • As you say, you have no experience, but I have seen you with William and you appear to have a natural affinity with children.
    • Teenagers have a natural affinity with the colour black as it saves having to change clothes everyday and time spent on needlessly choosing which outfit to wear today.
    • They have a natural affinity with traditional country music which is the kind I do in my show.
    • He showed a special affinity for the understanding and performance of the music of Rachmaninoff.
    • There is, or ought to be, a natural affinity between community supported radio stations and community supported farms.
    • She had a natural affinity with the country way of life and she relished the various tasks synonymous with the changing seasons.
    • He was most at home when working on the land and had a natural affinity with country people.
    • People of her generation had a natural affinity with the soil and through it they were connected to the best medicine of all… nature.
    • His employers realized his natural affinity for creating interesting smokes and immediately suspended all his other duties in favor of research.
    • There is a natural affinity between the pair and Freddie said he can't believe how close they have grown.
    • Ten years later, the two women meet at their children's school and find that they have a natural affinity for one another.
    • He had a natural affinity with the tribe and would never miss an opportunity to be with them, interact with them and frequently get into discussions with them.
    • She has a natural affinity for the little-sister role, and has begun to follow Adrianne everywhere she goes.
    • She discovered she had an affinity with horses immediately
    • This time round, her verse resonates with her strokes on canvas and though this has not been deliberate, there is, as she admits, a natural affinity between the two.
    • This dolphin later turned up in Grace Bay in 1980 and demonstrated a natural affinity with people.
    • For someone with such an affinity for the natural world, it's not surprising to discover that another passion of Baxter is conservation.
    Synonyms
    empathy, rapport, sympathy, accord, harmony, like-mindedness
    closeness to, fellow feeling for, understanding of
    liking for, fondness for, inclination towards, partiality for, penchant for, predilection towards, attraction towards
    informal chemistry
    relationship, bond, connection, propinquity
    1. 1.1 A similarity of characteristics suggesting a relationship, especially a resemblance in structure between animals, plants, or languages.
      a semantic affinity between two words
      Example sentencesExamples
      • The provenance signature instead suggests that the Sta Series has a closer affinity to the Northern Gneisses and may in a general sense represent a deformed cover sequence.
      • No fossils in the California Permian collection, other than the ‘hydrozoan’ described here, show a close affinity to Tethyan forms.
      • It seems that the dualistic language has an innate affinity to directive speech acts (in a second-person perspective).
      • Dresser's style was never dictated by dogmatic theories, but had a general affinity to the art of the early English Middle Ages and also suggested his admiration for Asian art.
      • The meta-compound also loses binding specificity and it binds to AT- and GC-rich sequences with similar, relatively low affinities.
      • Not surprisingly, we can see an affinity to Warhol's early films in this series of paintings.
      • All investigated specimens show a remarkable affinity to D. (A.) tyrolensis.
      • The researcher suggested a close affinity to Tetraodontiformes, although this idea has not been generally accepted.
      • Furthermore, as is typical of many phylogenetic problematica, myzostomids feature a mixture of characteristics that suggest affinities with disparate taxa.
      • Some authors have suggested a close relationship between cycads and Lyginopteris, but most favor an affinity to Medullosan seed plants.
      • Shaped by the fastidious Harnoncourt, the central andante movement opens with a horn theme that whispers an affinity to the Largo from the New World symphony.
      • He also suggested that Polyzoniida may have a closer affinity to Glomeridesmida than to the other colobognath taxa.
      • Nevertheless, ANII-DIN clearly had a higher affinity to the test sequences than ANI-NVS.
      • In its scale and some of its details Smith's building has an affinity to Richardson's 1875-1876 Hayden Building in Boston.
      • Many of those are incompletely preserved, and some are decidedly tubular in appearance, calling into question their affinity to the Hyolitha.
      Synonyms
      similarity, resemblance, likeness, kinship
      correspondence, relationship, association, link, analogy, similitude, agreement, compatibility, congruity, parallelism, consonance
      identity, identicalness, uniformity, equivalence
    2. 1.2mass noun Relationship, especially by marriage as opposed to blood ties.
      the distinction between kinship and affinity is not always clear-cut
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Yet she is also conscious of her own gypsy blood, of her affinity with these creatures.
      • Early Carboniferous coral faunas of the block have a strong Eurasian affinity, with two recognized coral faunas from two ecological facies having been recognized.
      • These might be brief glossaries, grammatical or rhetorical definitions, astronomical diagrams, tables of kindred and affinity, accounts, or tests of penmanship by the apprentice.
      • There are hints of affinity in the terms used for these partnerships: baere is also romantic partner and kale is a term for spouse.
      • His recent utterances have shown him to have a more than ethnic affinity with Disraeli; and these are times that demand the Disraelian touch.
      • Inter-confessional marriage and inter-confessional aid are expressions of social affinity.
      • They generally feel a kinship and affinity with other types.
      • However, many states only punished relationships between first cousins and closer, and others only punished relationships of consanguinity, but not affinity.
      • The bulk of local people were from the same Pashtun tribal stock as the Afghans of Kandahar and Jalalabad, and they felt close cultural and tribal affinity with those over the border.
      • Peoples with no particular affinity toward each other are bound together in a state that was largely externally created and not the outcome of local political processes.
      • Croats also began to look to Serbs and other southern Slavs as people with whom they shared a linguistic and cultural affinity.
      • Across the continent there were marked continuities in physical characteristics and cultural features, and many linkages based on relations of kinship, affinity, exchange, and religion.
      • Use of the same island at the same time and the synchronization of seasonal and annual movements were not directly linked to any social affinity between the two individuals.
      • Relational proximity is shaped by cultural affinity and facilitated by spatial and institutional proximity.
      • These connections reflect ideological, not ethnic, affinity.
      • Related to this notion of communal affinity is ‘social closure’.
  • 2Biochemistry
    The degree to which a substance tends to combine with another.

    the bacterial proteins bind to these molecules with high affinity
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Besides the long-range interactions it makes with neighboring protease residues, the binding affinity of a peptide also depends on its own conformation.
    • When the divalent cation dissociates from actin, the affinity of actin for nucleotide is greatly reduced.
    • Our data do not pose any reason to suspect that we deal with gadolinium complexes of variable valence or that the affinity of binding sites changes with their density or occupancy.
    • Several of these results were based on measurements of binding affinities between specific residues in S4 and in the pore domain.
    • In the context of the affinity of hemoglobin for oxygen there are four primary regulators, each of which has a negative impact.

Origin

Middle English (in the sense 'relationship by marriage'): via Old French from Latin affinitas, from affinis 'related' (literally 'bordering on'), from ad- 'to' + finis 'border'.

  • paraffin from mid 19th century:

    This word first appeared in 1830 in German, coined by the chemist Karl Reichenbach from the Latin parum ‘little’ and affinis ‘related’ (also the source of affinity (Middle English)) because of its low chemical reactivity. It was in use in English within five years.

Rhymes

asininity, clandestinity, divinity, femininity, infinity, masculinity, salinity, trinity, vicinity, virginity
 
 

Definition of affinity in US English:

affinity

nounəˈfɪnədiəˈfinədē
often affinity between/for/with
  • 1A spontaneous or natural liking or sympathy for someone or something.

    he has an affinity for the music of Berlioz
    Example sentencesExamples
    • People of her generation had a natural affinity with the soil and through it they were connected to the best medicine of all… nature.
    • For someone with such an affinity for the natural world, it's not surprising to discover that another passion of Baxter is conservation.
    • Ten years later, the two women meet at their children's school and find that they have a natural affinity for one another.
    • This dolphin later turned up in Grace Bay in 1980 and demonstrated a natural affinity with people.
    • There is, or ought to be, a natural affinity between community supported radio stations and community supported farms.
    • The natural affinity between these two just seems to be a fact.
    • She discovered she had an affinity with horses immediately
    • She had a natural affinity with the country way of life and she relished the various tasks synonymous with the changing seasons.
    • As you say, you have no experience, but I have seen you with William and you appear to have a natural affinity with children.
    • She has a natural affinity for the little-sister role, and has begun to follow Adrianne everywhere she goes.
    • He showed a special affinity for the understanding and performance of the music of Rachmaninoff.
    • This time round, her verse resonates with her strokes on canvas and though this has not been deliberate, there is, as she admits, a natural affinity between the two.
    • He was most at home when working on the land and had a natural affinity with country people.
    • Teenagers have a natural affinity with the colour black as it saves having to change clothes everyday and time spent on needlessly choosing which outfit to wear today.
    • His employers realized his natural affinity for creating interesting smokes and immediately suspended all his other duties in favor of research.
    • There is a natural affinity between the pair and Freddie said he can't believe how close they have grown.
    • Dolphins have a natural affinity with humans and just being with them, playing with them and touching them, is credited with bringing about wondrous results for sick people.
    • He was born with a natural affinity for the outdoors: he loved the mountains and rivers, as well as the forests and farms, birds, insects, wolves and bears.
    • They have a natural affinity with traditional country music which is the kind I do in my show.
    • He had a natural affinity with the tribe and would never miss an opportunity to be with them, interact with them and frequently get into discussions with them.
    Synonyms
    empathy, rapport, sympathy, accord, harmony, like-mindedness
    relationship, bond, connection, propinquity
    1. 1.1 A similarity of characteristics suggesting a relationship, especially a resemblance in structure between animals, plants, or languages.
      a building with no affinity to contemporary architectural styles
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Shaped by the fastidious Harnoncourt, the central andante movement opens with a horn theme that whispers an affinity to the Largo from the New World symphony.
      • The meta-compound also loses binding specificity and it binds to AT- and GC-rich sequences with similar, relatively low affinities.
      • Many of those are incompletely preserved, and some are decidedly tubular in appearance, calling into question their affinity to the Hyolitha.
      • It seems that the dualistic language has an innate affinity to directive speech acts (in a second-person perspective).
      • In its scale and some of its details Smith's building has an affinity to Richardson's 1875-1876 Hayden Building in Boston.
      • The provenance signature instead suggests that the Sta Series has a closer affinity to the Northern Gneisses and may in a general sense represent a deformed cover sequence.
      • He also suggested that Polyzoniida may have a closer affinity to Glomeridesmida than to the other colobognath taxa.
      • Furthermore, as is typical of many phylogenetic problematica, myzostomids feature a mixture of characteristics that suggest affinities with disparate taxa.
      • All investigated specimens show a remarkable affinity to D. (A.) tyrolensis.
      • Dresser's style was never dictated by dogmatic theories, but had a general affinity to the art of the early English Middle Ages and also suggested his admiration for Asian art.
      • Some authors have suggested a close relationship between cycads and Lyginopteris, but most favor an affinity to Medullosan seed plants.
      • Not surprisingly, we can see an affinity to Warhol's early films in this series of paintings.
      • The researcher suggested a close affinity to Tetraodontiformes, although this idea has not been generally accepted.
      • Nevertheless, ANII-DIN clearly had a higher affinity to the test sequences than ANI-NVS.
      • No fossils in the California Permian collection, other than the ‘hydrozoan’ described here, show a close affinity to Tethyan forms.
      Synonyms
      similarity, resemblance, likeness, kinship
    2. 1.2 Relationship, especially by marriage as opposed to blood ties.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Across the continent there were marked continuities in physical characteristics and cultural features, and many linkages based on relations of kinship, affinity, exchange, and religion.
      • Inter-confessional marriage and inter-confessional aid are expressions of social affinity.
      • These connections reflect ideological, not ethnic, affinity.
      • However, many states only punished relationships between first cousins and closer, and others only punished relationships of consanguinity, but not affinity.
      • They generally feel a kinship and affinity with other types.
      • Use of the same island at the same time and the synchronization of seasonal and annual movements were not directly linked to any social affinity between the two individuals.
      • His recent utterances have shown him to have a more than ethnic affinity with Disraeli; and these are times that demand the Disraelian touch.
      • Early Carboniferous coral faunas of the block have a strong Eurasian affinity, with two recognized coral faunas from two ecological facies having been recognized.
      • There are hints of affinity in the terms used for these partnerships: baere is also romantic partner and kale is a term for spouse.
      • The bulk of local people were from the same Pashtun tribal stock as the Afghans of Kandahar and Jalalabad, and they felt close cultural and tribal affinity with those over the border.
      • Croats also began to look to Serbs and other southern Slavs as people with whom they shared a linguistic and cultural affinity.
      • Yet she is also conscious of her own gypsy blood, of her affinity with these creatures.
      • These might be brief glossaries, grammatical or rhetorical definitions, astronomical diagrams, tables of kindred and affinity, accounts, or tests of penmanship by the apprentice.
      • Related to this notion of communal affinity is ‘social closure’.
      • Peoples with no particular affinity toward each other are bound together in a state that was largely externally created and not the outcome of local political processes.
      • Relational proximity is shaped by cultural affinity and facilitated by spatial and institutional proximity.
    3. 1.3Biochemistry The degree to which a substance tends to combine with another.
      the affinity of hemoglobin for oxygen
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Our data do not pose any reason to suspect that we deal with gadolinium complexes of variable valence or that the affinity of binding sites changes with their density or occupancy.
      • Besides the long-range interactions it makes with neighboring protease residues, the binding affinity of a peptide also depends on its own conformation.
      • Several of these results were based on measurements of binding affinities between specific residues in S4 and in the pore domain.
      • In the context of the affinity of hemoglobin for oxygen there are four primary regulators, each of which has a negative impact.
      • When the divalent cation dissociates from actin, the affinity of actin for nucleotide is greatly reduced.

Origin

Middle English (in the sense ‘relationship by marriage’): via Old French from Latin affinitas, from affinis ‘related’ (literally ‘bordering on’), from ad- ‘to’ + finis ‘border’.

 
 
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