| 释义 | 
		Definition of coordinator in English: coordinatornounˌkəʊˈɔːdɪneɪtəkoʊˈɔrdəneɪdər 1A person whose job is to organize events or activities and to negotiate with others in order to ensure they work together effectively.  a full-time coordinator was appointed to oversee the referral process Example sentencesExamples -  We have "an unprecedented forest health problem," said the forest watch coordinator with the Allegheny Defense Project.
 -  We'll be working with regionally based coordinators, who will work directly with the farms to collect the data.
 -  The organic farm exchange has grown from 23 host farms in 1999 to 230 in 2005, according to its coordinator.
 -  He is the clandestine lab coordinator for the state patrol.
 -  A motion was made to eliminate the various coordinator positions from the association's constitution.
 -  My team at the university is the designated northern states coordinator for this effort.
 -  He is research coordinator of the alliance, based in Kentucky.
 -  Our grant coordinator says this is the ideal time to try organic peanuts in the South.
 -  Individuals' questions could be sent via email to the contest coordinator at the national headquarters in Washington.
 -  Group travel was arranged by the program coordinators, but students individually purchased their airline tickets.
 
 2Grammar  A word used to connect clauses, sentences, or words of equal syntactic importance (e.g. and, or, for)  subordinate clauses can be connected with a coordinator Example sentencesExamples -  Both coordinators and subordinators may be reinforced by being combined with correlatives.
 -  I marked only finite subordinate clauses, not infinitive clauses, and not main clauses strung together by coordinators like "and" and "but."
 -  Two or more subordinate clauses can be connected with a coordinator.
 -  She analyzes transcripts of interviews with political figures and examines the patterns of grammatical function words (coordinators, subordinators, prepositions, and such).
 -  The two classes of conjunctions are coordinating conjunction or coordinator and subordinating conjunction or subordinator.
 -  The process of linking units by means of coordinators is known as conjunction, conjoining, and traditionally and most commonly coordination.
 -  You do not want linguistic theory to analyze all coordinate structures the way logicians do, in terms of binary coordinators.
 -  A compound sentence involves the coordination of two or more main clauses, linked by the coordinators and, or, but.
 -  Also discussed is the faulty placement of matched coordinators like either/or, both/and, and not only/but also.
 -  No verbs at all in this book—just nouns, pronouns, adjectives, adverbs, prepositions, subordinators, coordinators, and "oh!"
 
    Definition of coordinator in US English: coordinatornounkōˈôrdənādərkoʊˈɔrdəneɪdər 1A person whose job is to organize events or activities and to negotiate with others in order to ensure they work together effectively.  a full-time coordinator was appointed to oversee the referral process Example sentencesExamples -  We'll be working with regionally based coordinators, who will work directly with the farms to collect the data.
 -  My team at the university is the designated northern states coordinator for this effort.
 -  Group travel was arranged by the program coordinators, but students individually purchased their airline tickets.
 -  A motion was made to eliminate the various coordinator positions from the association's constitution.
 -  He is research coordinator of the alliance, based in Kentucky.
 -  He is the clandestine lab coordinator for the state patrol.
 -  The organic farm exchange has grown from 23 host farms in 1999 to 230 in 2005, according to its coordinator.
 -  Individuals' questions could be sent via email to the contest coordinator at the national headquarters in Washington.
 -  We have "an unprecedented forest health problem," said the forest watch coordinator with the Allegheny Defense Project.
 -  Our grant coordinator says this is the ideal time to try organic peanuts in the South.
 
 2Grammar  A word used to connect clauses, sentences, or words of equal syntactic importance (e.g. and, or, for)  subordinate clauses can be connected with a coordinator Example sentencesExamples -  Also discussed is the faulty placement of matched coordinators like either/or, both/and, and not only/but also.
 -  Both coordinators and subordinators may be reinforced by being combined with correlatives.
 -  You do not want linguistic theory to analyze all coordinate structures the way logicians do, in terms of binary coordinators.
 -  Two or more subordinate clauses can be connected with a coordinator.
 -  She analyzes transcripts of interviews with political figures and examines the patterns of grammatical function words (coordinators, subordinators, prepositions, and such).
 -  The two classes of conjunctions are coordinating conjunction or coordinator and subordinating conjunction or subordinator.
 -  I marked only finite subordinate clauses, not infinitive clauses, and not main clauses strung together by coordinators like "and" and "but."
 -  No verbs at all in this book—just nouns, pronouns, adjectives, adverbs, prepositions, subordinators, coordinators, and "oh!"
 -  A compound sentence involves the coordination of two or more main clauses, linked by the coordinators and, or, but.
 -  The process of linking units by means of coordinators is known as conjunction, conjoining, and traditionally and most commonly coordination.
 
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