英:[nɪˈgəʊʃieɪtə(r)]
美:[nɪˈgoʊʃieɪtə(r)]
英:[nɪˈgəʊʃieɪtə(r)]
美:[nɪˈgoʊʃieɪtə(r)]
n.
磋商者
交涉者
出售者
交易者
复数:negotiators
verb
intransitive verb
to confer with another so as to arrive at the settlement of some matter
Teachers are negotiating for higher salaries.
transitive verb
to deal with (some matter or affair that requires ability for its successful handling) : manage
negotiated his business deals with remarkable skill
to arrange for or bring about through conference, discussion, and compromise
negotiate a treaty
to transfer (something, such as a bill of exchange) to another by delivery or endorsement (see endorse sense 1d)
to convert into cash or the equivalent value
negotiate a check
to successfully travel along or over
negotiate a turn
complete, accomplish
negotiate the trip in two hours
1590年代,“商人”(现已过时); 大约1600年,“进行谈判的人,作为主要人物或代理人与他人打交道的人”; 源自拉丁语 negotiator “批发经营的人”,源自 negotiatus,过去分词形式为 negotiari “经营业务,做生意”(参见 negotiation)。
borrowed from Latin negōtiātus, past participle of negōtiārī "to do business, trade, deal," derivative of negōtium "work, business, difficulty, annoyance," from nec "not" + ōtium "free time, leisure, tranquility," of obscure origin — more at neglect >entry 1 Note: The sense "to confer in order to arrive at a settlement" is probably based on Middle French negocier or Italian negoziare, which had developed this sense, not belonging to the Latin source, by the mid-16th century.
The first known use of negotiate was circa 1598
neighbor1 of 2noun
a person who lives near another
a person or thing located near another
Canada is a neighbor of the U.S.
a fellow human being
neighbor2 of 2verb
to be next to or near to
neighboring towns
neighborhoodnoun
the quality or state of being neighbors
a place or region near : vicinity
a number or amount near
cost in the neighborhood of $10
the people living near one another
a section lived in by people who consider themselves neighbors
neighbor1 of 2noun
a person who lives near another
a person or thing located near another
Canada is a neighbor of the U.S.
a fellow human being
neighbor2 of 2verb
to be next to or near to
neighboring towns
neighverb
to make the loud drawn-out cry of a horse
negotiateverb
to have a discussion with another so as to arrive at an agreement
to arrange for or bring about by such discussion
negotiate a treaty
to transfer to another in return for something of equal value
negotiate a check
to get through, around, or over successfully
negotiate a turn
1 According to one of the people present at the European Union-Israel aviation talks, European negotiators had made clear that the Israeli security program “could be a detriment to developing the market.”
2 The customer wanted to negotiate over the price.
3 Through half of the first season, “Dollhouse” mined that premise for episodic adventures involving its star, Eliza Dushku, who could play a hostage negotiator one week and a backup singer and bodyguard the next.
4 But Palestinian negotiator Saeb Erekat is putting a positive spin on the Hamas decision.
但是,巴勒斯坦谈判代表赛义卜·埃雷卡特则对哈马斯的决定持正面看法.
5 Fictional first lady Claire Underwood is one tough negotiator — and so is the woman who plays her.
6 His negotiator, George Iacovou, thinks Turkey does not want a deal at present.
他的谈判代表乔治•亚科武(GeorgeIacovou)说土耳其目前不想达成什么协议。
7 One former senior executive at Channel 4 recalls Bazalgette as a tough negotiator who had the channel "paying through the nose" for the show.
8 He’s like the world’s best crisis negotiator, except that he’s trying to get the other man to jump.
9 Lawrence adds that she “failed as a negotiator” because she “gave up early.”
10 "One wonders whether or not internal political pressures in Afghanistan will constrain the options of Afghan negotiators on subjects ranging from U.S. basing rights to night raids," Exum said.
11 David White, the national executive director and chief negotiator for SAG-AFTRA, said he believed they had found a safe way forward.
12 Kassovitz plays the French negotiator whose efforts to broker a peaceful outcome are undone by colonial prejudices and French domestic politics.
13 This makes his devil’s bargain the rare Baker deal in which the master negotiator comes out the loser.
14 It’s one thing when Ford teaches future hostage negotiators to make perpetrators “feel heard” — that’s just strategy, albeit an edgy one.
15 The other side's negotiator came clean at last.
谈判对手最后亮了底牌.
16 Real estate executives describe the elder Mr. Durst, who died in 1995, as a tiny, polite if eccentric man, a skilled negotiator but one who rarely raised his voice as Mr. Langella’s menacing character does.
17 Richard Holbrooke was such a relentless negotiator that he reportedly once followed Clinton into the ladies room in Pakistan to finish making his point.
18 Q: My 7-year-old is a big-time negotiator on just about everything: how many treats, how long for screen time, punishments, how long he has to clean.
19 "I think we need federal laws that are comprehensive," she said in response to a question about Amy Pascal's comment that women need to be better negotiators to get equal pay.
20 She has good negotiating skills.