C1 adjective Formal

microsimiltion

/ˌmaɪkroʊˌsɪmɪlˈʃən/

Describing a modeling or analytical approach that focuses on the behavior of individual units or agents within a system to predict aggregate outcomes. It is used to characterize high-resolution simulations that account for granular details rather than broad generalizations.

Ejemplos

3 de 5
1

The new traffic software uses a microsimiltion engine to account for the unique braking habits of every driver on the road.

The new traffic software uses a microsimiltion engine to account for the unique braking habits of every driver on the road.

2

The ministry applied a microsimiltion framework to evaluate how the proposed tax changes would affect various low-income household structures.

The ministry applied a microsimiltion framework to evaluate how the proposed tax changes would affect various low-income household structures.

3

I'm looking for a microsimiltion game where you can control the lives of individual ants in a colony.

I'm looking for a microsimiltion game where you can control the lives of individual ants in a colony.

Familia de palabras

Sustantivo
microsimultion
Verb
microsimilate
Adverbio
microsimiltionally
Adjetivo
microsimiltion
Relacionado
microsimulator
💡

Truco para recordar

Break it down: 'Micro' (tiny/individual) + 'Simil' (similar/simulation) + 'tion' (the state of). It's a tiny simulation of individual parts.

Quiz rápido

The university's economics department is developing a ______ tool to predict how individual spending habits change during inflation.

¡Correcto!

La respuesta correcta es: a

Ejemplos

1

The new traffic software uses a microsimiltion engine to account for the unique braking habits of every driver on the road.

everyday

The new traffic software uses a microsimiltion engine to account for the unique braking habits of every driver on the road.

2

The ministry applied a microsimiltion framework to evaluate how the proposed tax changes would affect various low-income household structures.

formal

The ministry applied a microsimiltion framework to evaluate how the proposed tax changes would affect various low-income household structures.

3

I'm looking for a microsimiltion game where you can control the lives of individual ants in a colony.

informal

I'm looking for a microsimiltion game where you can control the lives of individual ants in a colony.

4

Academic researchers prefer microsimiltion methodologies because they capture emergent behaviors that are often lost in macro-level analysis.

academic

Academic researchers prefer microsimiltion methodologies because they capture emergent behaviors that are often lost in macro-level analysis.

5

Our business strategy is now driven by microsimiltion data, allowing us to simulate specific consumer responses to our new product line.

business

Our business strategy is now driven by microsimiltion data, allowing us to simulate specific consumer responses to our new product line.

Familia de palabras

Sustantivo
microsimultion
Verb
microsimilate
Adverbio
microsimiltionally
Adjetivo
microsimiltion
Relacionado
microsimulator

Colocaciones comunes

microsimiltion model microsimiltion model
microsimiltion analysis microsimiltion analysis
microsimiltion approach microsimiltion approach
microsimiltion software microsimiltion software
microsimiltion study microsimiltion study

Frases Comunes

microsimiltion-based

microsimiltion-based

run a microsimiltion

run a microsimiltion

high-fidelity microsimiltion

high-fidelity microsimiltion

Se confunde a menudo con

microsimiltion vs microsimulation

Microsimulation is the standard noun form, whereas microsimiltion is used here as a specific technical adjective.

microsimiltion vs microsimilitude

Microsimilitude refers to the quality of appearing very small but real, while microsimiltion refers to the process of modeling individuals.

📝

Notas de uso

This term is highly technical and predominantly used in fields like urban planning, sociology, and econometrics. As an adjective, it modifies nouns related to research design or computer modeling.

⚠️

Errores comunes

Learners may misspell this as 'microsimulation' or use it when they actually mean 'macro-level' modeling, which is the opposite. Note that despite the -tion suffix, it is being used attributively.

💡

Truco para recordar

Break it down: 'Micro' (tiny/individual) + 'Simil' (similar/simulation) + 'tion' (the state of). It's a tiny simulation of individual parts.

📖

Origen de la palabra

Derived from the Greek 'mikros' (small) and the Latin 'simulatio' (an imitation or feigning).

Patrones gramaticales

used as an attributive adjective non-gradable typically precedes nouns like model, analysis, or framework

Quiz rápido

The university's economics department is developing a ______ tool to predict how individual spending habits change during inflation.

¡Correcto!

La respuesta correcta es: a

Palabras relacionadas

sit

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To rest your body on your bottom with your back upright, typically on a chair or the floor. It describes both the action of moving into this position and the state of being in it.

stand

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To be in an upright position supported by one's feet rather than sitting or lying down. It also refers to the physical location of an object or a person's particular opinion on a subject.

pay

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To give money to someone in exchange for goods, services, or to settle a debt. It can also mean to give something non-monetary, such as attention or a compliment.

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To come together with someone at a specific place and time, or to be introduced to someone for the first time. It can also mean to satisfy a requirement, standard, or need.

continue

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To keep doing something or to stay in the same state without stopping. It can also mean to start an activity again after a short break.

set

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To put or place something in a specific position or location. It also means to adjust or prepare something so that it is ready for use, such as a clock or a table.

learn

A1

To gain knowledge, understanding, or a skill by studying, practicing, or being taught. It refers to the process of acquiring information through experience or education.

lead

A1

To go in front of a group of people to show them the way to a place. It also means to be in control of a group, a team, or an activity.

understand

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To know the meaning of what someone is saying or how something works. It involves grasping an idea, a language, or a situation clearly in your mind.

follow

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To move behind someone or something in the same direction. It also means to obey rules, instructions, or to understand the logic of an argument or story.

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