英:[ˈkrɪmɪnəlaɪz]
美:[ˈkrɪmənəˌlaɪz]
英:[ˈkrɪmɪnəlaɪz]
美:[ˈkrɪmənəˌlaɪz]
第三人称单数:criminalizes
现在分词:criminalizing
过去式:criminalized
过去分词:criminalized
Verb
1. treat as a criminal
2. declare illegal; outlaw;
"Marijuana is criminalized in the U.S."
criminal >entry 1 + -ize
The first known use of criminalize was circa 1956
1 “We have to talk about this issue in a comprehensive, much more benign and understanding way. It is a phenomenon that will always happen, and we need to establish ways to not criminalize this phenomenon.”
2 While Lopez's charges were dropped, Diddy went to trial, claiming he was a victim of the criminal justice system's vendetta against criminalizing Black men.
3 Nixon's plan to criminalize both heavily and disrupt those communities has worked like a charm and has created a new American tradition for Black men: the tradition of prison.
4 On the other side of the country, for the same behavior, Black folks are criminalized.
5 "I speak out because laws criminalizing consensual, adult same-sex relationships violate basic rights to privacy and to freedom from discrimination. Even if they are not enforced, these laws breed intolerance."
6 Today, 32 states and two U.S. territories have laws criminalizing HIV exposure, according to the Center for HIV Law and Policy.
7 In contrast, Hillary Clinton referred to the criminalized as animals, describing them as “super-predators” which have to be “brought to heel.”
8 It is poor, young women who are being criminalized, she says.
9 California, a center of Internet technology, would become the second U.S. state to criminalize the act, though as a misdemeanor.
10 He finished a novel, a piece of speculative fiction about a society where drugs have never been criminalized, titled “Narcotica.”
11 Of that total, an estimated 4.5 million people are forced into sex work, despite the fact international law and the laws of 134 countries criminalize sex trafficking.
12 So on the one hand, this is good news for anti-violence activists, in terms of criminalizing violence against women.
13 She lived through the same thing, watching abortion become more criminalized.
14 a law that criminalized alcohol
15 Rather, it shows how these valued employees of the SAPD’s mental health division help suicidal and dangerous citizens get the treatment the need without criminalizing them.
16 Food insecure people may resort to criminalized methods to obtain food, which can lead to a prison sentence.
17 Since cannabis has been criminalized well into the 21st Century, Americans born long after the 1930s continue to view hemp negatively.
18 To date British courts have been able to issue civil orders to prevent people from being forced into marriage but this is the first time it has been criminalized.
19 Now activists are working on a federal law to criminalize it.
20 I also hope that it will help to show how the current laws do not help victims but only criminalize them along with those who are doing consensual sex work.
2 非法
funny illegal underground unlawful shady illicit illegitimate under-the-counter on the side under the counter
3 使有罪
4 使非法化