Betekenis van:
mastery

mastery
Zelfstandig naamwoord
  • grotere macht
  • power to dominate or defeat
"mastery of the seas"

Synoniemen

Hyperoniemen

Hyponiemen

mastery
Zelfstandig naamwoord
    • the act of mastering or subordinating someone

    Synoniemen

    Hyperoniemen

    mastery
    Zelfstandig naamwoord
      • great skillfulness and knowledge of some subject or activity

      Synoniemen

      Hyperoniemen


      Voorbeeldzinnen

      1. Use makes mastery.
      2. The two candidates are struggling for mastery.
      3. I had complete mastery over my feeling.
      4. He has mastery of his temper.
      5. He had complete mastery over the necessary mathematics formula.
      6. A good mastery of these idiomatic expressions and skillful use of them in writing essays.
      7. Drawing on my fine mastery of the English language, I said nothing.
      8. By the time human civilization was a million years old, it had achieved mastery of faster-than-lightspeed voyages.
      9. It was innovation in Muslim communities that developed the order of algebra; our magnetic compass and tools of navigation; our mastery of pens and printing; our understanding of how disease spreads and how it can be healed.
      10. Language learners sometimes marvel that even two-year-olds can speak French; but two-year-olds can't speak much French; and many will be improving their mastery until the end.
      11. Building on a sound mastery of numeracy, the emphasis is on process and activity, as well as knowledge.
      12. Feed businesses must have a system of documentation designed to define and ensure mastery of the critical points in the manufacturing process and to establish and implement a quality control plan.
      13. The activities of IFP and its subsidiaries are to be seen against the threefold background of increasing energy demand primarily driven by increased mobility and trade, the steady exhaustion of oil and gas reserves, and mastery of greenhouse gas emissions.
      14. The Barcelona European Council of 15 and 16 March 2002 set the objective of making European Union education and training systems a world quality reference by 2010, and called for action to improve the mastery of basic skills, in particular by teaching at least two foreign languages from a very early age.
      15. According to some authors, it was ‘the raising of pigs and a renowned mastery of the art of processing pigmeat (which, as is known, was introduced into the area by the Lombards)’ that enabled the village of Colonnata to survive during the Middle Ages, when marble quarrying slumped.