| 释义 | 
		Definition of gleanings in English: gleaningsplural nounˈɡliːnɪŋzˈɡlinɪŋz Things, especially facts, that are gathered or collected from various sources rather than acquired as a whole. (从各种渠道)收集(而非整体获得)的东西(尤指事实)  an answer based wholly upon a few gleanings from the Sunday newspapers Example sentencesExamples -  Next week it's all about music: spiritual gleanings from the multicultural arts festival, Carnivale, including Byzantine chant.
 -  So by applying our model (Reading, Navigating, Interacting) and our short list of gleanings, there are all sorts of things that can be done to browsers to make them better.
 -  He devoted just over 1 page to these remains in the course of a four-page article on miscellaneous gleanings buried in the deep Sahara.
 -  Warships are therefore hermetically-sealed custodians of separate vernacular languages, or gleanings from them.
 -  These are gleanings not from your run-of-the-mill general knowledge ready-reckoner, but rather from a directory of, by and perhaps for doctors.
 -  Suffering several weeks of temporary lameness, I have been taking taxis a good deal, and offer a few gleanings from recent experience.
 -  His writings about aspects of Chinese life combine published information, his own observations, and gleanings from his sources in China.
 -  It's reminiscent of other press gleanings, except that he makes no pretense that his work is objective.
 -  All of it was furnished with what looked like gleanings from someone's attic - hill station style.
 -  The result is not a complete picture but a fragmented collage made up of one man's gleanings.
 -  Three sets of comments are printed on each page: standard historical and philological notes; gleanings from mid-rashic theological reflections; and ethical advice for today's Conservative Jews.
 -  Chapter three represents the author's gleanings from the aforementioned 175 peninsular cases the author found mainly in the Sevillian Archive of the Indies.
 -  Several minutes later, after reading each result, he filtered the information and ran the gleanings back out onto the dummy websites he'd set up.
 
    Definition of gleanings in US English: gleaningsplural nounˈɡlēniNGzˈɡlinɪŋz Things, especially facts, that are gathered or collected from various sources rather than acquired as a whole. (从各种渠道)收集(而非整体获得)的东西(尤指事实) Example sentencesExamples -  Several minutes later, after reading each result, he filtered the information and ran the gleanings back out onto the dummy websites he'd set up.
 -  His writings about aspects of Chinese life combine published information, his own observations, and gleanings from his sources in China.
 -  Suffering several weeks of temporary lameness, I have been taking taxis a good deal, and offer a few gleanings from recent experience.
 -  Next week it's all about music: spiritual gleanings from the multicultural arts festival, Carnivale, including Byzantine chant.
 -  So by applying our model (Reading, Navigating, Interacting) and our short list of gleanings, there are all sorts of things that can be done to browsers to make them better.
 -  Warships are therefore hermetically-sealed custodians of separate vernacular languages, or gleanings from them.
 -  These are gleanings not from your run-of-the-mill general knowledge ready-reckoner, but rather from a directory of, by and perhaps for doctors.
 -  All of it was furnished with what looked like gleanings from someone's attic - hill station style.
 -  The result is not a complete picture but a fragmented collage made up of one man's gleanings.
 -  He devoted just over 1 page to these remains in the course of a four-page article on miscellaneous gleanings buried in the deep Sahara.
 -  Chapter three represents the author's gleanings from the aforementioned 175 peninsular cases the author found mainly in the Sevillian Archive of the Indies.
 -  Three sets of comments are printed on each page: standard historical and philological notes; gleanings from mid-rashic theological reflections; and ethical advice for today's Conservative Jews.
 -  It's reminiscent of other press gleanings, except that he makes no pretense that his work is objective.
 
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