coalition如何读

英:[ˌkəʊəˈlɪʃn]

美:[ˌkoʊəˈlɪʃn]

coalition英汉释义

n.(名词)
  1. [C]结合体,同盟 a union of separate political parties for a special purpose for a limited period of time

coalition是什么意思

  • n.结合;联合;联盟

coalition自然拼读

co·a·li·tion

ko lI shn

coalition变形

复数:coalitions

coalition扩展

coalitional (adj.), coalitionist (n.)

coalition词根

词根:coalesce

adj.

coalescing 聚结的

coalescent 合并的;接合的

n.

coalescence 合并;联合;接合

coalescent 联合;合并

v.

coalescing 合并;联合(coalesce的现在分词)

vi.

coalesce 合并;结合;联合

vt.

coalesce 使…联合;使…合并

coalition英英释义

  • n.
    • an organization of people (or countries) involved in a pact or treaty
    • the state of being combined into one body
    • the union of diverse things into one body or form or group; the growing together of parts

coalition词组

coalition government联合政府

coalition force联军

coalition词源中文解释

"联合,结合"的意思始于1610年代,源自于法语 coalition(1540年代),源自于晚期拉丁语 coalitus "团结",最初是拉丁语 coalescere "联合,结合,成长为一体"的过去分词(参见 coalesce)。政治意义上的"自愿暂时的人员、政党、国家等联合,以达到某种目的"的含义可追溯至1715年。

coalition_医学行业词汇

结合,联合,结合体:正常分离的部件融合在一起

神经细胞联合体

coalition词源英文解释

French, from Latin coalescere — see coalesce

The first known use of coalition was in 1604

coalition儿童词典英英释义

coarseadjective

of ordinary or poor quality

made up of large parts or particles

coarse sand

being harsh or rough

coarse cloth

not precise or detailed : roughly approximate

crude in taste, manners, or language

coarseadjective

of ordinary or poor quality

made up of large parts or particles

coarse sand

being harsh or rough

coarse cloth

not precise or detailed : roughly approximate

crude in taste, manners, or language

coarseadjective

of ordinary or poor quality

made up of large parts or particles

coarse sand

being harsh or rough

coarse cloth

not precise or detailed : roughly approximate

crude in taste, manners, or language

coarseadjective

of ordinary or poor quality

made up of large parts or particles

coarse sand

being harsh or rough

coarse cloth

not precise or detailed : roughly approximate

crude in taste, manners, or language

coalitionnoun

a temporary union of persons, parties, or countries for a common purpose

coalitionnoun

a temporary union of persons, parties, or countries for a common purpose

coalition 例句

1 So every cut, every budget, every single piece of legislation that this "coalition government" proposes has no mandate from any single member of the electorate.

2 As a result, the Democratic New Deal coalition evolved into an alliance of urban ethnic groups and the white South that dominated electoral politics from 1932 to the early 1960s.

3 Here he gives a gripping, West Wing-style account of the wheeling and dealing behind the scenes as both the major parties try to boss and flatter the Lib Dems into a coalition.

4 In an effort to defeat the measure, a coalition of residents, small business owners and real estate agents have formed a coalition called Stop the South Tahoe Vacancy Tax.

5 “We already work together as a loose coalition,” said Marc Miller, co-chair of the marketing committee of Museums in the Park and vice president of external affairs at the Peggy Notebaert Nature Museum.

6 According to the coalition’s brief, a blanket protective order would prohibit Bannon and his attorney from communicating with the news media about their case.

7 And the coalition’s unusual process — encouraging members to vent and channel powerful emotions, as they did in that early meeting — lifted members up through struggles unlike anything most had ever experienced.

8 Widespread library closures are expected as councils cut their services and look to volunteers in an attempt to balance budgets hit by the coalition's spending review.

9 Many are trying to combat racial injustice in light of demands made by coalitions including “We See You, White American Theater.”

10 In this, the Shard resembles One Hyde Park, another creation of the coalition of Livingstone's politics, Qatari finance and eminent hi-tech architects.

11 His policy risks fracturing the coalition.

他的政策有分裂联盟的风险。

12 Originally founded in 1999, this group would go through a series of name and leadership changes as coalition attacks degraded its command and control structures.

13 “I feared that the growing prevalence of angry, uncivil disobedience would deepen the socioeconomic split in the coalition for stronger government action,” he says.

14 Kelly Sadler, the White House's director of surrogate and coalitions outreach, also once belittled her father's brain cancer in a meeting, saying: "He's dying, anyway."

15 We are a glorious rainbow coalition of messy individuals.

16 It's the coalition forces who are to blame for the continuation of the war.

是联军应对战争的持续负责。

17 There are plenty of rhymes for "coalition," after all.

18 The "Awakening" in the title refers to the moment in late 2006 when key insurgents turned against al-Qaida and sided with coalition forces, a turning point that finally brought some measure of stability to Iraq.

19 They didn't rule out coalition with the Social Democrats.

他们不排除与社会民主党人结盟的可能性。

20 Ultra-Orthodox parties in the coalition had opposed plans to extend conscription to their supporters, who are now exempt.

coalition 同义词

相关词