英:[prəʊl]
美:[proʊl]
英:[prəʊl]
美:[proʊl]
复数:proles
Noun
1. a member of the working class (not necessarily employed);
"workers of the world--unite!"
缩写自 proletarian(名词),1887年(乔治·伯纳德·肖); 由乔治·奥威尔1949年的小说《1984》推广。作为形容词自1938年起使用。相关词汇: Proly(形容词); prolier-than-thou。
The first known use of prole was in 1887
1 Unlike Tanya, Miranda long ago flew up from prole purgatory into elite heaven, complete with “ritzy” private schools, a Newport address and limitless credit cards.
2 It was one of countless similar songs published for the benefit of the proles by a sub-section of the Music Department.
3 The word chav, if your subscriptions to British periodicals have lapsed, is a noun that essentially means “ugly prole”: loutish, tacky, probably drunken and possibly violent.
4 In George Orwell’s “1984,” the proles are spared a life of constant surveillance, while higher-ranking members of society are exposed to Big Brother’s watchful eye.
5 If there was anyone alive who could give you a truthful account of conditions in the early part of the century, it could only be a prole.
6 The rebel manufacturers of Hoffman lenses inside the church will never for an instant consider distributing those potential instruments of prole revolution among their immediate neighbors in Justiceville.
7 The train was full of proles, in holiday mood because of the summery weather.
8 Here was a fellow prole, having battled New York City for an absurdly large prize, humping it home like a weary commuter.
9 It’s toffs against proles, the rivalry of one of the great aristocrats of the early game, Lord Arthur Kinnaird, and the Glaswegian stonemason who was the first great professional, Fergus Suter.
10 It's dying from oligarchs, climate chaos, gun culture, racist policing, a pandemic without end, infotainment, misery for the proles, welfare for the fat cats.
11 If there was hope, it lay in the proles!
12 “Steamer” was a nickname which, for some reason, the proles applied to rocket bombs.
13 Late at night, when crowds of rowdy proles roamed the streets, the town had a curiously febrile air.
14 The proles, normally apathetic about the war, were being lashed into one of their periodical frenzies of patriotism.
15 He and his friends learned Latin and Greek in high school, and they preferred fencing or horseback riding to soccer, which was considered a “prole” activity.
16 Nicky Whelan, as the sheriff, is like a prole Angelina Jolie, and the hulking actors who play the prisoners, like Mike Ferguson and Randall J. Bacon, turn them into convincing hardened sinners.
17 So the cheeky medieval prole schtick fell flat.
18 But if there was hope, it lay in the proles.
19 It was probable that there were some millions of proles for whom the Lottery was the principal if not the only reason for remaining alive.
20 One never saw a double bed nowadays except in the homes of the proles.
2 无产阶级的
3 无产阶级者
4 无产者
5 工人阶级的