IV
Beauty is momentary in the mind --
The fitful tracing of a portal;
But in the flesh it is immortal.
The body dies; the body's beauty lives.
So evenings die, in their green going,
"Calque" itself is a loanword from the French noun calque ("tracing; imitation; close copy"); the verb calquermeans "to trace; to copy, to imitate closely"; papier calque is "tracing paper".[1] The word "loanword" is itself a calque of the German word Lehnwort, just as "loan translation" is a calque of Lehnübersetzung.[2]
Tracing may refer to:
Tracing (law), a process by which a one demonstrates the ownership of property to be awarded a claim based on this information
Tracing (criminology), a subject that aims to determine crime scene activity from trace evidence left at crime scenes
Tracing of family members, a service provided by the Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement
Tracing (as with a gun or camera), tracking an object, as with the use of tracer ammunition
Tracing (art), copying an object or drawing, especially with the use of translucent tracing paper
Call tracing, a procedure in telephony that permits an entitled user to be informed about the routing of data for an established connection
Anterograde tracing, and Retrograde tracing, biological research techniques used to map the connections of neurons
Tracking and tracing, a process of monitoring the location and status of property in transit
How Contact Tracing Works
Partners In Health
YouTube - 2014/10/11
17:50
WHO:GO Training - Case finding and contact tracing - Module ...
World Health Organization...
Perfecting Ebola Contact Tracing — Factpod #13
Ebola and Contact Tracing
Coronavirus: Hong Kong Health Authorities Conduct China ...
QuickTake by Bloomberg
YouTube - 2020/01/23
en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Contact_tracing
接触者追跡調査
詳細報道和分析來了。不過,英國有關當局還沒有公佈兩名患者的身份。英國首席醫療官31日宣佈,英國有兩人新型冠狀病毒檢測呈陽性。分析說,「追蹤接觸者」是預防擴散的關鍵。
BBC.COM
英國確診兩例新型冠狀病毒感染 追蹤接觸者「迫在眉睫」
In public health, contact tracing is the process of identification of persons who may have come into contact with an infected person ("contacts") and subsequent collection of further information about these contacts. By tracing the contacts of ...
Contact tracing
In public health, contact tracing is the process of identification of persons who may have come into contact with an infected person ("contacts") and subsequent collection of further information about these contacts. By tracing the contacts of infected individuals, testing them for infection, treating the infected and tracing their contacts in turn, public health aims to reduce infections in the population. Diseases for which contact tracing is commonly performed for include tuberculosis, vaccine-preventable infections like measles, sexually transmitted infections (including HIV), blood-borne infections, some serious bacterial infections, and novel infections (e.g. SARS).
verb [T]
1 to find someone or something that was lost:
The police are trying to trace the mother of a newborn baby found abandoned outside a hospital.
Attempts to trace the whereabouts of a man seen leaving the scene of the crime have so far been unsuccessful.
Their missing daughter was finally traced to (= found in) Manchester.
2 to find the origin of something:
The phone company were unable to trace the call.
No one has yet been able to trace the source of the rumour.
3 to discover the cause or origin of something by examining the way in which it has developed:
The outbreak of food poisoning was traced to some contaminated shellfish.
The practice of giving eggs at Easter can be traced back to festivals in ancient China.
Rivalries between the gangs can be traced back to (= first happened in) the 1950s in some black and Hispanic neighbourhoods.
4 to describe the way in which something has developed:
The film traces the events leading up to the Russian Revolution in 1917.
trace
noun
1 [C or U] a sign that something has happened or existed:
He attempted to cover up all the traces of his crime.
When she moved out, she left no trace of having been there.
My wallet has been missing for several days and I can't find any trace of it.
He seems to have vanished without (a) trace (= No one knows where he is).
2 [C] an act of finding information about something electronically, or the record of the information found in this way:
The phone company put a trace on the call.
NOUN
Derivatives
traceable
adjective
possible to trace:
In theory, most telephone calls should be traceable.
His medical problems were shown to be traceable to (= to have been caused by) his having been exposed to dangerous chemicals.
traceable
adjective
possible to trace:
In theory, most telephone calls should be traceable.
His medical problems were shown to be traceable to (= to have been caused by) his having been exposed to dangerous chemicals.
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