| 释义 | 
		Definition of subgroup in English: subgroupnoun ˈsʌbɡruːpˈsəbˌɡrup 1A subdivision of a group. 小小组,分组;小团体,小集团 Example sentencesExamples -  A subgroup of the staphylococcus aureus organisms, it is referred to as a superbug because it is resistant to treatment with commonly used antibiotics.
 -  A second subgroup, the episodically homeless, account for approximately 10 percent.
 -  These groups were subdivided into two subgroups of eight animals each: one male and one female.
 -  Meanwhile, much more is known about the types and subgroups of youngsters that commit the bulk of violent and other crimes.
 -  The government has divided the general population into three classes and 51 subgroups.
 -  As subgroups of autism spectrum disorders are characterized, a stronger connection may emerge.
 -  It is not unusual to see busts or heads serving as lugs for lids of large funerary vessels, especially among the Kwahu subgroup.
 -  The idea of some sort of broader Asian American identity is probably alien not just to most Indians, but I suspect other Asian subgroups as well.
 -  Cluster analysis is a useful technique for sorting families into distinct, naturally occurring subgroups.
 -  A second study compared dyslexic subgroups defined by their degree of phonological impairment.
 -  Females within the D. melanogaster subgroup were sorted in the field and placed individually into vials.
 -  Although we observed no significant interaction between subgroups, the power to analyse each subgroup was limited.
 -  He said that schools have set up withdrawal systems for students to go away and do units, and have organised little subgroups in classes to do special credits.
 -  These groups were further subdivided into subgroups according to the body mass of the respective species.
 -  Another Minister has responsibility for the community grants, a subgroup of this from the department.
 -  There are several ethnic subgroups in Nabire that have their own distinctive characteristics, including their art and culture.
 -  The government's top three ministries are controlled by men who belong to a tiny subgroup of an ethnic minority.
 -  This group has continued to evolve and even to split into subgroups.
 -  In five studies, respondents were categorized according to clinical status, and subgroups were compared.
 -  Some of these tribes might have been a subgroup of the other ones.
 
 - 1.1Mathematics  A group whose members are all members of another group, both being subject to the same operations.
〔数〕子群 Example sentencesExamples -  After further papers on subgroups of infinite abelian groups and normal numbers he wrote a series of eight papers on Arithmetic on curves of genus 1.
 -  The object of the course was to study the modular group and some of its subgroups, with help of algebraic rather than analytic or topological methods.
 -  The procedure, today much used in computer implementations, enumerates the cosets of a subgroup of finite index in a finitely presented group.
 -  Although Euler's work is, of course, not stated in group theoretic terms he does provide an example of the decomposition of an abelian group into cosets of a subgroup.
 -  Not all numbers have such convenient patterns behind them, but within every number there are always subgroups of digits that have mathematical meaning.
 
  
    Definition of subgroup in US English: subgroupnounˈsəbˌɡrupˈsəbˌɡro͞op 1A subdivision of a group. 小小组,分组;小团体,小集团 Example sentencesExamples -  The idea of some sort of broader Asian American identity is probably alien not just to most Indians, but I suspect other Asian subgroups as well.
 -  Although we observed no significant interaction between subgroups, the power to analyse each subgroup was limited.
 -  Meanwhile, much more is known about the types and subgroups of youngsters that commit the bulk of violent and other crimes.
 -  These groups were further subdivided into subgroups according to the body mass of the respective species.
 -  As subgroups of autism spectrum disorders are characterized, a stronger connection may emerge.
 -  These groups were subdivided into two subgroups of eight animals each: one male and one female.
 -  Another Minister has responsibility for the community grants, a subgroup of this from the department.
 -  A subgroup of the staphylococcus aureus organisms, it is referred to as a superbug because it is resistant to treatment with commonly used antibiotics.
 -  It is not unusual to see busts or heads serving as lugs for lids of large funerary vessels, especially among the Kwahu subgroup.
 -  Females within the D. melanogaster subgroup were sorted in the field and placed individually into vials.
 -  There are several ethnic subgroups in Nabire that have their own distinctive characteristics, including their art and culture.
 -  The government's top three ministries are controlled by men who belong to a tiny subgroup of an ethnic minority.
 -  This group has continued to evolve and even to split into subgroups.
 -  Some of these tribes might have been a subgroup of the other ones.
 -  A second study compared dyslexic subgroups defined by their degree of phonological impairment.
 -  The government has divided the general population into three classes and 51 subgroups.
 -  A second subgroup, the episodically homeless, account for approximately 10 percent.
 -  In five studies, respondents were categorized according to clinical status, and subgroups were compared.
 -  He said that schools have set up withdrawal systems for students to go away and do units, and have organised little subgroups in classes to do special credits.
 -  Cluster analysis is a useful technique for sorting families into distinct, naturally occurring subgroups.
 
 - 1.1Mathematics  A group whose members are all members of another group, both being subject to the same operations.
〔数〕子群 Example sentencesExamples -  The object of the course was to study the modular group and some of its subgroups, with help of algebraic rather than analytic or topological methods.
 -  After further papers on subgroups of infinite abelian groups and normal numbers he wrote a series of eight papers on Arithmetic on curves of genus 1.
 -  The procedure, today much used in computer implementations, enumerates the cosets of a subgroup of finite index in a finitely presented group.
 -  Not all numbers have such convenient patterns behind them, but within every number there are always subgroups of digits that have mathematical meaning.
 -  Although Euler's work is, of course, not stated in group theoretic terms he does provide an example of the decomposition of an abelian group into cosets of a subgroup.
 
  
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