安裝中文字典英文字典辭典工具!
安裝中文字典英文字典辭典工具!
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- Reason Studios
It's a virtual Rack where you wire up instruments and effects to create the sounds you're looking for You can use it as a plugin or a full-blown DAW with recording, sequencing, mixing, and everything else you’d expect Fast, fluid, and fun, Reason is all about making music—however you make music
- REASON Definition Meaning - Merriam-Webster
The meaning of REASON is a statement offered in explanation or justification How to use reason in a sentence Synonym Discussion of Reason
- REASON | English meaning - Cambridge Dictionary
REASON definition: 1 the cause of an event or situation or something that provides an excuse or explanation: 2… Learn more
- REASON Synonyms: 262 Similar and Opposite Words - Merriam-Webster
Synonyms for REASON: explanation, argument, justification, rationale, accounting, case, excuse, apology; Antonyms of REASON: result, issue, effect, consequence, development, product, outcome, corollary
- Reason 13. 3 is here - Reason Studios
This free update to Reason 13 includes lots of bug fixes and improvements, further refinements to Reason’s new look, and the much-requested ability to use the Browser as a side panel The new browser in Reason 13 introduced categories, tags, and a wide range of enhancements for quickly exploring and navigating all the content in Reason
- Reason | Rationality, Logic, Argumentation | Britannica
Reason is in opposition to sensation, perception, feeling, desire, as the faculty (the existence of which is denied by empiricists) by which fundamental truths are intuitively apprehended These fundamental truths are the causes or “reasons” of all derivative facts
- REASON Definition Meaning | Dictionary. com
Reason definition: a basis or cause, as for some belief, action, fact, event, etc See examples of REASON used in a sentence
- Reason - definition of reason by The Free Dictionary
Reason is the power to think rationally and logically and to draw inferences: "Mere reason is insufficient to convince us of its [the Christian religion's] veracity" (David Hume)
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