英:[ɪnˈsaɪdə(r)]
美:[ɪnˈsaɪdɚ]
英:[ɪnˈsaɪdə(r)]
美:[ɪnˈsaɪdɚ]
in·sid·er
ihn saI dr
复数:insiders
词根:inside
adj.inside 里面的;内部的;秘密的
adv.inside 在里面
n.inside 里面;内部;内情;内脏
prep.inside 少于;在…之内
noun
a person recognized or accepted as a member of a group, category, or organization: such as
a person who is in a position of power or has access to confidential information
a person (such as an officer or director) who is in a position to have special knowledge of the affairs of or to influence the decisions of a company
insider trading内线交易
insider dealing股市内幕交易
"内部拥有特殊信息的人,因为在某个组织内部而拥有这些信息",1848年,来自 inside(n.)+ -er(1)。最初是指股票市场。
内部人员
内幕人员
业内人士
The first known use of insider was in 1848
insidernoun
a person who is a member of a special group or organization
1 Tomlin, 75, also admitted she had been surprised by her selection, saying she had "never been privy to the insider's circle".
2 It's probably the biggest reason he's in the Walk of Fame, an honor conferred by some 200 surfing insiders from around the world.
3 Fair insiders asked what a museum director was doing selling a painting.
4 You’ve got to not only get the facts right but represent the subject to the world in a way that insiders feel like it’s an access port and outsiders can access it.
5 Uniquely among its peers, the show mixes highbrow insider jargon with out-and-out filth.
6 But insiders said she did not take the final decision on whether the programme should be broadcast.
7 As before, the fair suggests that the line between outsider and insider art becomes blurrier with each passing year.
8 On the other, the Hollywood famous are drawn to the way association with policymakers and D.C. insiders can alleviate their intellectual insecurity complexes.
9 Still, to all but the most clued-in insiders, the first lady appeared to have plucked him from obscurity.
10 Matt contends that being on the inside does not necessarily make one an insider, especially as a hard-line conservative in Washington.
11 Industry insiders say privately that many shows are unlikely to start up until after Labor Day, provided there is adequate mitigation of the pandemic, perhaps including a vaccine, by then.
12 Davis, the consummate Washington insider and former special counsel to Bill Clinton, offers his take on the 2016 election.
13 That, industry insiders say, is a function of increased costs all around, as well as a recognition by artists that resale platforms like StubHub have revealed the true market value of a top-notch concert ticket.
14 Although its insider’s perspective is at times intimidating, it offers a starkly accurate portrait of baseball as a big business in the age of big money.
15 Another Fox insider said that Fox News strives to operate on principles that might not always align with appealing to the channel’s core audience.
16 In reaching out to writers for the collection, she said, she was pleased to see work that aimed to “rewrite the genre” from an insider’s perspective.
17 Because of my connection with the bank you could be accused of insider trading.
我在银行里做事,你可能因此被人指控盗窃内部经济情报.
18 Whenever stars use the platform to support progressive causes and make political statements, large numbers of viewers turn the channel, according to academy insiders, who cite minute-by-minute Nielsen data for past shows.
19 It's a culture that, ballet insiders assure us, Aronofsky just doesn't get.
20 Launched in January, Hollywood & Swine has a devoted following of Hollywood insiders and spawned a guessing game over the duo behind it.