link (original) (raw)

(Definition of link from the Cambridge Academic Content Dictionary © Cambridge University Press)

link

Our website also has external links to publicly available software, yeast galactose data and lung cancer data.

Each of these committees has legal services representation, and many of the plans are integrally linked to the current legal services pro bono programs.

There are also important links between national saving and investment and the international sector.

In this way, pastiche is linked to a nostalgic attempt to reproduce the experience of the past.

The remarkable precision of this arrangement cannot be due to chance, nor can the connection that links the two sides of the cup.

The list contains links to the full-text document files.

The divisibility argument is represented historically by a range of philosophers and often linked with arguments concerning personal identity over time.

The meaning in a lexical entry is linked internally to other parts of the entry.

They must also learn how the semantic and morphological properties of words are linked to their syntactic properties.

Like fashion, material culture has been linked to determinism.

Proper ostension takes place in the philosophical outdoors, and is not feasible as a means for linking together otherwise disparate, subjectively private worlds.

Given such staging practices, note the potential links between house keys and casket keys.

A few plays keep open the possibility that a tomb - monument - vault may be linked to the trap door and hence be located below.

The aesthetic linked to this version of nature would be very unlike that idealized landscape of the picturesque, in other words, unlike the aesthetic ideology.

Here the change in costume, which already clearly signifies cultural colonization, is clearly linked to rapacious trading and monopolization.

These examples are from corpora and from sources on the web. Any opinions in the examples do not represent the opinion of the Cambridge Dictionary editors or of Cambridge University Press or its licensors.

These are words often used in combination with link.

Click on a collocation to see more examples of it.

alleged link

But many philosophers have viewed the alleged link with caution.

broken link

We are talking here of a broken link in the transport chain.

causal link

This is not altogether surprising given the problems associated with establishing a causal link between authenticity and motivation.

These examples are from corpora and from sources on the web. Any opinions in the examples do not represent the opinion of the Cambridge Dictionary editors or of Cambridge University Press or its licensors.