英:[ˈrædɪklaɪz]
美:[ˈrædɪkəˌlaɪz]
英:[ˈrædɪklaɪz]
美:[ˈrædɪkəˌlaɪz]
rad·i·cal·ize
rae dih k laIz
第三人称单数:radicalizes
现在分词:radicalizing
过去式:radicalized
过去分词:radicalized
radicalization (n.)
"Her work in the developing world radicalized her"
1820年,及物动词,“使激进,使符合激进理念”,源自 radical(形容词)+ -ize。不及物动词“变得激进”的意思是在1828年左右出现的。相关词汇: Radicalized; radicalizing。
The first known use of radicalize was in 1830
radicalizeverb
to make radical
1 The Afrikaners’ trolling may have already had an effect; Malaika tells Fairbanks of a friend who has been radicalized to the point where “she doesn’t believe white people have the capacity for humanity.”
2 “You never know, man. I mean, people get radicalized, right? Maybe somebody knows something about that dude that we don’t. You should have seen him yesterday when he got into it with Drew.”
3 Coppola isn’t new to attempts at radicalizing the film-making process.
4 The protesting outside the convention — and the violent response by the Chicago police — radicalized him, and his work.
5 There is no evidence, contra Ross Douthat, that the withering criticism of Trump was what radicalized and motivated Trump’s supporters.
6 But until senior Republicans acknowledge how they helped radicalize the party, there is little hope that it will transform itself.
7 When I sit with someone in Europe, telling me about how they were radicalized there, when they’re telling me about moments where they don’t belong, I understand that.
8 Thus he hopes to infiltrate and radicalize public awareness.
9 “Justice Thomas was embittered by his bruising confirmation battle and in some ways radicalized in terms of his jurisprudence,” said legal scholar David Lat, founder of the Above the Law blog.
10 Something like the opposite was true in the United States, where young artists radicalized by the Depression were eager to explore the possibilities of social consciousness-raising public art.
11 Clinton bet most of her chips on there being some floor, some violation of norms too low even for today’s radicalized Republican Party.
12 Corneille was best known for radicalizing the conservative Dutch art world in the early 1950s, making modern art not only acceptable, but embraceable as well.
13 The right has become radicalized, abandoning the “social moderation which served it so well from Disraeli to Heath, from Theodore Roosevelt to Nelson Rockefeller.”
14 Other conservatives in the news media and strategist class have been saying just this for well over a year, of course, but they don’t depend on a radicalized base to keep their jobs.
15 He was a civil rights activist in the 1960s who was radicalized by the 1965 Watts riots but later turned against Black nationalism.
16 For years, Garson has been struggling to uphold his country’s militant objectives while also maintaining his friendship with some radicalized friends from college.
17 “I hope the Democrats are sufficiently radicalized that they reform the court, expand it and make our podcast obsolete,” Liroff said.
18 But the Cuban revolution, the assassination in 1965 of Malcolm X and the Newark riots of 1967, when the poet was jailed and photographed looking dazed and bloodied, radicalized him.
19 “She’s going to be on all the posters, trying to get people radicalized,” Daniels says.
20 Some thirty per cent of French citizens who are radicalized today are women, according to the government.
2 煽动
incendiary seditious coattrailing needle turmoil agitation instigation hound agitate stir ferment instigate inflame goad foment fan the flames blow the bellows pour oil on waters set the heather on fire
3 鼓舞
stimulant animation spur stir man inspire comfort inform elevate summon quicken rouse invigorate hearten inspirit keep in countenance cheer to victory
6 彻底改变