英:[ˌpɑːtɪˈzæn]
美:[ˈpɑːrtəzn]
英:[ˌpɑːtɪˈzæn]
美:[ˈpɑːrtəzn]
adj.
党派性的
偏袒的
游击队的
n.
党羽,强硬支持者
游击队员
戟的一种
par·ti·san
par t zn [or] par t sn [or] par t zaen
复数:partisans
partisanship (n.)
词根:partisan
n.partisanship 党派性;党派偏见;对党派的忠诚
noun (1)
a firm adherent to a party, faction, cause, or personespecially: one exhibiting blind, prejudiced, and unreasoning allegiance
political partisans who see only one side of the problem
a member of a body of detached light troops making forays and harassing an enemy
Peasant partisans assaulted the French army.
a member of a guerrilla band operating within enemy lines
Polish partisans had blown up two trains—Springfield (Massachusetts) Union
adjective
feeling, showing, or deriving from strong and sometimes blind adherence to a particular party, faction, cause, or person : exhibiting, characterized by, or resulting from partisanship partisan loyalty Secularism is indeed correlated with greater tolerance of gay marriage and pot legalization. But it's also making America's partisan clashes more brutal.—Peter Beinart The editorial page of the newspaper captured the mood of an America frustrated by partisan division …—Joseph Cress The modern Democratic party may honor the cerebral Jefferson as one of its founders, but the true paternity lies with the fiercely partisan Jackson. He made it a fighting electoral force.—Bernard A. Weisberger
partisan politics
of, carried on by, or being military partisans partisan warfare
partisan fighters
noun (2)
a weapon of the 16th and 17th centuries with long shaft and broad blade
同时 partizan,1550年代,“与他人一起参与,热心支持者”,特别是那些因偏见而坚定支持某个派别的人,源自于法语 partisan(15世纪),来自意大利上层方言 partezan(托斯卡纳方言: partigiano)“一个派别的成员,伙伴”,从 parte “部分,派别”派生而来,源于拉丁语 partem(主格形式: pars)“部分,碎片,一份,一个部分或派别,身体的一部分,分数,功能,职位”(来自 PIE 根词 *pere- (2)“授予,分配”)。
在军事使用中,“被派遣执行特殊任务的部队成员”,起源于1690年代。由于这些常常是非正规部队,它在拿破仑战争的半岛战役中被赋予“游击战士”的意义,并再次用于指南斯拉夫和东欧在二战中对纳粹占领的抵抗。
偏一方的
同党
Noun (1) Middle French partisan, from north Italian dialect partiźan, from part part, party, from Latin part-, pars part Noun (2) Middle French partisane, from north Italian dialect partiźana, feminine of partiźan
The first known use of partisan was in 1542
partitionnoun
division sense 1a, separation
an interior dividing wall
part entry 1 sense 1a, section
partisannoun
a person who is strongly devoted to a particular cause or group
guerrilla
1 Reactions to the current crisis vary widely, and are strongly inflected by partisan, generational and other divides.
2 He appointed himself Freud's heated partisan, energetically defending psychoanalytic innovations.
3 Today this has taken a shockingly partisan turn.
4 The military remain highly partisan, as do the courts, and the police.
5 The interchanges were sharp and often partisan, and at first, focused on narrow and technical issues over the specific wording of the articles.
6 She actually preferred to be among the poor, the working-class poor of the Red Hook Housing Projects in Brooklyn, the cement mixers, bakers, doughnut makers, grandmothers, and soul-food church partisans who were her lifelong friends.
7 The postmaster's request arrived just as lawmakers returned from a summer break and appeared prepared to pick up where they left off — in a fierce partisan battle over government spending and job creation.
8 The news is partisan and sensationalist, the language vulgar and advertising floods the schedules.
9 This behind-the-scenes look at how Supreme Court nominations became so partisan, by a New York Times journalist, is “entertaining and shrewd,” wrote our reviewer, Evan Thomas.
10 The White House expected negotiations to resume after Congress finished voting on proposals limited to partisan appeal.
11 They want to help immigrants, and the groups that support them, but don’t want to come off as partisans — or be lumped into the resistance movement against the president.
12 As the fighting approached their area, the plucky Marchesa Origo took in war orphans, hid fleeing Italian partisans and Allied paratroopers, and negotiated with the German military units that patrolled the area.
13 But if the French outrage calls to mind international reaction to the wartime behavior of a more recent president named George, Mr. Witt hardly aims to give aid and comfort to contemporary partisans.
14 Once out of office, he complained that party-aligned newspapers kept their readers in partisan silos.
15 After an eight-day trial, the three-judge panel agreed and concluded that GOP lawmakers impermissibly used a racial target and sorted voters predominantly by race to achieve a partisan outcome.
16 Even in his home state of New York, the Federalists were, as John Quincy Adams put it, “a minority, and of that minority, only a minority were admirers and partisans of Mr. Hamilton.”
17 With a typically effusive Baker at the helm, though, this three-part powwow was oddly compelling; you even found yourself warming, fleetingly, to Jeremy Clarkson, revealing his partisan support for the Who.
18 Telling the story from her perspective, Randolph said, “would connect it to the idea that this isn’t a partisan issue. Maybe my parents would pay attention to a woman who doesn’t consider herself a feminist.”
19 The partisans executed the couple and their loyalists and then brought them to Milan where they were hanged for public viewing.
20 She was passionate about politics, and intensely partisan, and if cancer had not killed her, Trump’s candidacy might well have — long before election night.
1 党派性的
2 对党派的效忠
5 坚决支持者
7 偏袒
partial partially favour partiality favouritism weight take sides one-sided prejudice leaning preference bias
9 党派偏见
11 有偏袒的
13 党徒
14 戟的一种
15 由一个党派组成的
17 党派观念强的人
18 附和
19 戟兵
20 游击队员