英:[rɪ'leʃənz]
美:[rɪ'leʃənz]
英:[rɪ'leʃənz]
美:[rɪ'leʃənz]
n.
彼此间的看法,两者的关系
关系( relation的名词复数 )
亲戚(关系)
亲属(关系)
(事物之间的)关系
noun
the act of telling or recounting : account
an aspect or quality (such as resemblance) that connects two or more things or parts as being or belonging or working together or as being of the same kindspecifically: a property (such as one expressed by is equal to, is less than, or is the brother of) that holds between an ordered pair of objects
the relation of time and space
the referring by a legal fiction of an act to a prior date as the time of its taking effect—usually used with back
a person connected by consanguinity or affinity : relative
relationship by consanguinity or affinity : kinship
reference, respect
in relation to
the attitude or stance which two or more persons or groups assume toward one another
race relations
the state of being mutually or reciprocally interested (as in social or commercial matters)
dealings, intercourse
foreign relations
business relations业务关系
diplomatic relations外交关系
economic relations经济关系
foreign relations外交关系
industrial relations劳资关系
sexual relations两性关系;性交
investor relations投资者关系;投资者关系部;股东关系
property relations产权关系;财产关系;产权制度
ethnic relations族群关系
race relationsn. 种族关系(同一国家中的)
personal relations人际关系
establishing business relations建立贸易关系
community relations社区关系
government relations政府关系(government relation的复数)
establishment of diplomatic relations建交;建立外交关系
have relations with与…有某种关系
council on foreign relations外交关系委员会,外交关系协会
public relations department公关部;外联部
normal trade relations正常贸易关系
price relations比价
性行为
Middle English relacion, from Anglo-French, from Latin relation-, relatio, from referre (past participle relatus) to carry back
The first known use of relation was in the 14th century
relativitynoun
the quality or state of being relativeespecially: dependence on something else
a theory in physics that considers mass and energy to be equal and that states that a moving object will experience changes in mass, size, and time which are related to its speed and are not noticeable except at speeds approaching that of light
an extension of relativity theory to include gravity and its related acceleration effects
relativisticadjective
of, relating to, or characterized by relativity
relative1 of 2noun
a word referring grammatically to one that comes before it
a person connected with another by blood or marriage
relative2 of 2adjective
introducing a subordinate clause that qualifies an expressed or implied antecedent
relative pronoun
introduced by a word having such an antecedent
relative clause
relevant, pertinent
questions relative to the topic
existing in comparison to something else
the relative value of two houses
having the same key signature—used of major and minor keys and scales
relativelyadverb
somewhat entry 2
relative1 of 2noun
a word referring grammatically to one that comes before it
a person connected with another by blood or marriage
relative2 of 2adjective
introducing a subordinate clause that qualifies an expressed or implied antecedent
relative pronoun
introduced by a word having such an antecedent
relative clause
relevant, pertinent
questions relative to the topic
existing in comparison to something else
the relative value of two houses
having the same key signature—used of major and minor keys and scales
relationshipnoun
the state of being related
study language relationships
kinshipalso: a specific instance or type of this family relationships
claimed relationship with the mayor
a state of affairs existing between those having shared dealings
good doctor-patient relationships
relationshipnoun
the state of being related
study language relationships
kinshipalso: a specific instance or type of this family relationships
claimed relationship with the mayor
a state of affairs existing between those having shared dealings
good doctor-patient relationships
relationnoun
the act of telling or describing
connection sense 2, relationship
the relation of employer to employee
a related person : relative
reference entry 1 sense 2, respect
in relation to this matter
the state of sharing an interest (as in social or business matters)
plural business or public affairs foreign relations
good trade relations
plural dealings between persons or groups
improved his relations with his family
1 My major in international relations with a focus on North Africa was no longer an abstract area of study, it was what I was living, eating, and breathing every day for three months.
2 He is a frequent media commentator on international relations and legal issues.
他亦经常为国际传媒分析国际关系及法律事务。
3 These relations may be conveyed without even using a connective word: all the writer has to do is write the statements using parallel syntax and vary only the words that indicate the difference.
4 Along with reducing Cold War tensions and improving relations with the United States and other western nations, Gorbachev granted the Soviet people freedoms that they had never experienced.
5 I had not yet learned anything that would have helped me to thread my way through these perplexing racial relations.
6 We all spoke Norwegian and all our relations lived over there.
7 Oliver and I had encountered a recurring difficulty in our travels: one African leader after another had ques-tioned us about our relations with white and Indian communists, sometimes suggesting that they controlled the ANC.
8 While conditions varied from plantation to plantation, the majority of slaves lived a twilight existence in which no area of human relations or personal dignity was sacred.
9 As soon as relations improve they will be allowed to go.
一旦关系有所改善,他们就可以获准离开。
10 Unlikely to win the battle on its merits, Edison devoted considerable resources to trying to discredit AC in the realm of public relations: AC, he and his supporters asserted, was much more lethal than DC.
11 The secret police would report that he was not just a scholar of elf-goblin relations—he was a secret agent of the elves, a traitor against his own people.
12 There is something intrinsically good-natured about all symbiotic relations, necessarily, but this one, which is probably the most ancient and most firmly established of all, seems especially equable.
13 “Perhaps you may—who knows? Have you any relations besides Mrs. Reed?”
14 My parents didn’t have the kind of warm relations that most parents had.
15 “Yes, I think they have people coming down all the time—regular tours through the home as a kind of public relations thing. But why?”
16 One was for Miss Lark’s friends and relations, and the other for the Butcher and the Baker and the Milkman.
17 Mingo had taken advantage of the delay to press for improved relations with the white towns.
18 Autonomous tribal towns made decisions about trade and relations with other groups, but in some political and social matters, the towns worked together as a confederacy to make decisions that affected all of their members.
19 After he had learned the truth, and had accepted the truth, and the Muslim laws, Reginald was still carrying on improper relations with the then secretary of the New York Temple.
20 Noting William’s rapport with his British counterparts, the Army made him a point man in U.S.–U.K. intelligence relations, twice sending him on long trips overseas.