arrogate如何读

英:[ˈærəgeɪt]

美:[ˈærəˌɡet]

arrogate是什么意思

  • v.冒称;霸占;擅自

arrogate自然拼读

ar·ro·gate

ae r geIt

arrogate变形

第三人称单数:arrogates

现在分词:arrogating

过去式:arrogated

过去分词:arrogated

arrogate扩展

arrogation (n.), arrogator (n.)

arrogate词根

词根:arrogate

n.

arrogation 诈称;僭越;霸占

arrogate英英释义

Verb

1. demand as being one's due or property; assert one's right or title to;

"He claimed his suitcases at the airline counter"

"Mr. Smith claims special tax exemptions because he is a foreign resident"

2. make undue claims to having

3. seize and take control without authority and possibly with force; take as one's right or possession;

"He assumed to himself the right to fill all positions in the town"

"he usurped my rights"

"She seized control of the throne after her husband died"

arrogate词组

arrogate to oneself僭称;僭取 

arrogate词源中文解释

"傲慢地声称或要求",来自1530年代的拉丁语 arrogatus,是 arrogare 的过去分词,意为“为自己要求”,由 ad(见 ad-)的同化形式和 rogare “询问,提议(法律,候选人); 请求帮助,恳求,请求”组成,显然是一个比喻性的用法,源自一个 PIE 动词,字面意思是“伸出(手)”,来自 *rog-, 是 *reg- “直线移动”的变体。相关词汇: Arrogated; arrogating。

arrogate词源英文解释

borrowed from Latin arrogātus, past participle of arrogāre "to appoint along with (another magistrate), lay claim to, claim to possess, make undue claims, be conceited," from ar-, assimilated form of ad- ad- + rogāre "to ask, request" — more at rogation

The first known use of arrogate was in 1537

arrogate儿童词典英英释义

arsenopyritenoun

a hard bluish or grayish white mineral consisting of iron, arsenic, and sulfur

arsenicnoun

a solid poisonous element that is commonly metallic steel-gray and brittle see element

a white or transparent extremely poisonous oxide of arsenic used especially in insecticides

arroyonoun

a waterway (as a creek) in a dry region

an often dry gully or channel carved by water

arrownoun

a weapon that is made to be shot from a bow and is usually a stick with a point at one end and feathers at the other

a mark (as on a map) to show direction

arrowrootnoun

any of several plants of warm regions of Central and South America with starchy roots

an edible starch from the roots of an arrowroot plant

arrowheadnoun

the wedge-shaped striking end of an arrow

something (as a mark) resembling an arrowhead

arrownoun

a weapon that is made to be shot from a bow and is usually a stick with a point at one end and feathers at the other

a mark (as on a map) to show direction

arrogateverb

to take or claim for one's own without right

to attribute to another especially without good reason

arrogateverb

to take or claim for one's own without right

to attribute to another especially without good reason

arrogate 例句

1 Roe and [Planned Parenthood v.] Casey arrogated that authority.

2 By ruling that the Constitution requires the states to follow a one-person, one-vote principle, Thomas writes, “the Court has arrogated to the Judiciary important value judgments that the Constitution reserves to the people.”

3 Chief among Mr Chang's charges: that he had challenged his country's leadership, arrogated control of economic, judicial and security affairs to himself, and tried to form his own rival faction within the ruling Workers' Party.

4 When these jurists — all appointed by Republican presidents — arrogated the rights of millions of voters, they branded the court as just one more institution where political allegiance eclipsed principle.

5 Of course, much bigger than Khan arrogating to herself the power to void contracts is her belief that government entities (including her FTC) must stand in the way of successful businesses expanding via acquisition.

6 I do not arrogate to myself the right to decide.

我不擅自决定。

7 They are truly generative, an apt term for a novel that queries a selfish inventor, his damaged creature and science’s threat to arrogate creation to itself.

8 Such a gesture might be directed at China, which Rubio accused of arrogating territory near Japan and the Philippines.

9 At the same time, due to resource arrogate English in Asia, the only emu oil exporters.

同时,由于资源独揽,英吉利是亚洲唯一的鸸鹋油出口商。

10 "It can only happen through a Supreme Court decision. Otherwise no political party can arrogate themselves that right or power. It’s wishful thinking."

11 Don't arrogate evil motives to me.

不要栽脏给我.

12 His followers, as expositors of God’s word, arrogated immense powers to themselves; in 1979 one of them, Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, turned Iran into a theocracy.

13 Steeped in the spirit of 1970s social commentary, this show examines more acutely than ever before the psychic price women pay when their drive, intelligence and energy are arrogated to male ambition.

14 So why is his agency now arrogating to itself vast new regulatory power?

15 The historical term “Republic of China” should never be arrogated by the People’s Republic of China, which has never ruled Taiwan.

16 This is a Court that boldly arrogates power to itself.

17 No system that can only sustain itself by arrogating these powers can possibly be called “just.”

18 They've arrogated to themselves the power to change the rules arbitrarily.

19 My cousin first, don't understand, so not arrogate events for guard to see her . " unfortunately. "

我表哥初来报到, 并不了解事件的来由, 所以没有作提防才不幸见到 “ 她 ”.

20 Mr Obama’s lawyers complained that Arizona was in effect attempting to set its own immigration policy, and thereby arrogating a power the constitution gives to the federal government.

arrogate 同义词

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