| 释义 |
vary \ˈverē, ˈva(a)r-, ˈvār-, -ri\ verb (-ed/-ing/-es) Etymology: Middle English varien, from Middle French or Latin; Middle French varier, from Latin variare, from varius diverse, various — more at various transitive verb 1. : to bring about differences in: a. : to make an especially minor or partial change in : make different in some attribute or characteristic < this is not a proceeding which may be varied — John Marshall > b. : to make differences between items in : insure variety in : make unlike in some particular : variegate, diversify < a program that was varied enough to avoid monotony — Katharine Amend > < the days were not crowded, but they were enviably varied — Virginia Woolf > 2. : to present under new aspects < vary the rhythm and harmonic treatment > intransitive verb 1. : to exhibit or undergo change : break from sameness or uniformity : differ < a constantly varying terrain — Shipley Thomas > < chapters of varying worth — F.N.Robinson > < historical allusions of varying degrees of accuracy — T.D.McCormick > 2. : deviate, depart, swerve < vary from the law > < vary from the mean > 3. : to exhibit differing qualities or attributes in alternation or succession with something else < one mathematical quantity may vary inversely with another > 4. : to exhibit divergence in structural or physiological characters from those typical or usual in the group Synonyms: see change, differ |