empirical
Word family
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English 5++LDOCE 5++em·pir·i·cal /ɪmˈpɪrɪkəl/ ●○○ AWL adjective [only before noun] REAL/NOT IMAGINARYbased on scientific testing or practical experience, not on ideas 以实验[经验]为依据的;经验主义的 OPP theoretical, hypothetical empirical evidence 实验证据 —empirically /-kli/ adverbExamples from the Corpus
empirical• Allen also expressed concern about the empirical base for the category.• His theory is inconsistent with the empirical evidence.• Theoretical ideas are connected to the world by a translation into an empirical language more closely attuned to the observable world.• At the empirical level culture and nature can not be discriminated in this way.• Only if this character is recognised will society be understood in terms that are adequate to its empirical reality.• A hypothesis should have an empirical referent. 3.• The theoretical and empirical relationships between the constructed measures will be explored.empirical evidence• It is a myth that is clinically naive and will not stand up in the face of empirical evidence.• Good classification should have well-defined categories into which empirical evidence can be organized.• Nevertheless, the empirical evidence is that these contribute little to individual ageing.• From empirical evidence it seems that species that interact freely with others do so with a great number of other species.• There is, furthermore, substantial empirical evidence of variations in local policy outputs.• Moreover, the empirical evidence on the effect of egalitarianism on capital formation is uncertain.• This is consistent with empirical evidence reported in some studies.• We know of no empirical evidence that it is important.Origin empirical (1500-1600) empiric “person who puts trust only in practical experience” ((16-21 centuries)), from Latin empiricus, from Greek empeiria “experience”em·pir·i·cal adjectiveChineseSyllable
ideas experience, Corpus based scientific testing on not practical or on
empirical
em‧pir‧i‧cal AC /ɪmˈpɪrɪkəl/
adjective [only before noun]
OPP theoretical, hypothetical:
empirical evidence
—empirically /-kli/ adverb
em‧pir‧i‧cal AC /ɪmˈpɪrɪkəl/
adjective [only before noun] Date: 1500-1600
Origin: empiric 'person who puts trust only in practical experience' (16-21 centuries), from Latin empiricus, from Greek empeiria 'experience'
based on scientific testing or practical experience, not on ideas Origin: empiric 'person who puts trust only in practical experience' (16-21 centuries), from Latin empiricus, from Greek empeiria 'experience'
OPP theoretical, hypothetical:
—empirically /-kli/ adverb