英:[ˌprəʊɪˈbɪʃənɪst]
美:[ˌproʊəˈbɪʃənɪst]
英:[ˌprəʊɪˈbɪʃənɪst]
美:[ˌproʊəˈbɪʃənɪst]
词根:prohibit
adj.prohibitive 禁止的,禁止性的;抑制的;(费用,价格等)过高的;类同禁止的
adv.prohibitively 禁止地;过高地;过分地
n.prohibition 禁止;禁令;禁酒;诉讼中止令
vt.prohibit 阻止,禁止
The first known use of prohibitionist was in 1830
projectionistnoun
a person who operates a motion-picture projector or television equipment
projectionnoun
a method of showing a curved surface (as the earth) on a flat one (as a map)
the act of throwing or shooting forward
something that sticks out
the act or process of projecting something on a surface (as by motion pictures or slides)
an estimate of what might happen in the future based on what is happening now
project1 of 2noun
a plan or scheme to do something
a task or problem in school
my science project
a group of houses or apartment buildings built according to a single planespecially: one built with government help to provide low-cost housing
project2 of 2verb
to work out in the mind
to plan, figure, or estimate for the future
project next year's costs
to throw forward
stick out sense 1a
to cause to fall upon a surface
project motion pictures on a screen
projectilenoun
something (as a bullet or rocket) thrown or driven forward especially from or for use as a weapon
projectilenoun
something (as a bullet or rocket) thrown or driven forward especially from or for use as a weapon
project1 of 2noun
a plan or scheme to do something
a task or problem in school
my science project
a group of houses or apartment buildings built according to a single planespecially: one built with government help to provide low-cost housing
project2 of 2verb
to work out in the mind
to plan, figure, or estimate for the future
project next year's costs
to throw forward
stick out sense 1a
to cause to fall upon a surface
project motion pictures on a screen
prohibitiveadjective
likely to discourage use or purchase
prohibitive prices
prohibitiveadjective
likely to discourage use or purchase
prohibitive prices
prohibitionistnoun
a person who is in favor of prohibiting the manufacture and sale of alcoholic beverages
1 The global anti-drug regime has been in place for more than a half-century now, but the prohibitionist consensus has been crumbling for at least 20 years, and the decomposition continued apace this year.
2 “We have alcohol laws here in New York State that would make prohibitionists blush,” Mr. Skoufis said.
3 But what America does, what America wants and what America demands has impacts far beyond our borders, and the American prohibitionist impulse is no different.
4 Breweries can’t make health claims about their beer, due to regulations put in place after Prohibition (and largely due to the efforts of the same prohibitionists who brought about the 18th Amendment).
5 They have not committed to preserving freedom of movement in all circumstances; they have stuck with a prohibitionist approach to drugs; they have not stamped out antisemitism as ruthlessly as they ought to.
6 "The reason she was appointed is Theresa May was looking for someone who was a hard-line prohibitionist," he said.
7 Despite decades of failure and unintended consequences, the prohibitionist reflex is still strong.
8 By 2008, when the UN was set to celebrate a world free of illicit substances, criticism of prohibitionist policies was gaining momentum.
9 The DEA and prohibitionists hammer this point, and many, if not most, doctors, don’t like the idea of sick people inhaling smoke.
10 “Until I see hard numbers, I’m not going to consider someone who’s a prohibitionist give information because of their bias or subjective views,” he says.
11 A sprawling history of a concept, spanning decades of prohibitionist thinking and the latest in recovery research, could easily fall apart were it not informed by Fisher's experience.
12 “The flavors have hooked the kids. So take the flavors and leave the tobacco flavor for adults. We’re not prohibitionist.”
13 "We know the limitations and the painful implications of the prohibitionist enigma."
14 The disease notion, however, obscures those facts and narrows our view to counterproductive criminal responses, like harsh prohibitionist crackdowns.
15 Most of the shops are to be operated by people of color who had been incarcerated by prohibitionist laws.
16 The Trump Justice Department under prohibitionist Attorney General Jeff Sessions is reviving some of the drug war’s worst sentencing practices — mandatory minimum sentences, charging low-level defendants with the harshest statutes.
17 But she concedes that if young people feel they are living under an prohibitionist regime then "we need to listen to them".
18 The then government set up mechanisms to evaluate the impact of the change and concluded that the more prohibitionist approach wasn’t working.
19 “I made all the traditional prohibitionist arguments until I undertook my own independent research.”
20 But in the 1970s, along with global trends in drug use, heroin becomes more prominent, and it really expands after the success of the Islamic Revolution in 1979, mostly due to harsher prohibitionist laws.