pundit如何读

英:[ˈpʌndɪt]

美:[ˈpʌndɪt]

pundit是什么意思

  • n.权威人士;专家;博学的印度人

pundit自然拼读

pun·dit

puhn diht

pundit变形

复数:pundits

pundit英英释义

noun

an authoritative, or purportedly authoritative, commentator or critic.I'm not always in agreement with what the political pundits have to say on this matter.

a Hindu who is an expert in Indian law, culture, and religion.

one who is learned or expert in some field.

pundit词源中文解释

1670年代,“印度学者”,尤其是精通梵文知识、科学、法律或宗教的人,源自印地语 payndit “博学的人,大师,教师”,源自梵语 payndita-s “博学的人,学者”,这个词的起源不确定。1816年,英语中更广泛的应用于“任何博学的人”。相关: Punditry。

pundit词源英文解释

Hindi paṇḍit, from Sanskrit paṇḍita, from paṇḍita learned

The first known use of pundit was in 1661

pundit 例句

1 And the cohorts that have been dogging the movie since it came out will receive a new push from intellectuals and pundits and journalists eager to establish their too-cool-for-school cred or nonconformist bona fides.

2 If the show sometimes feels like tidy arguments between warring pundits, it also falls easily into the protagonist/antagonist dialogue of Greek drama.

3 He similarly examined footage of pundits claiming that this was the moment Trump suddenly became president.

4 When the Dixie Chicks ridiculed Bush’s foreign policy during a concert performance in London, right wing pundits organized a boycott, and many country radio stations cooperated.

5 When the Pentagon and pundits repeat the refrain that the breach of secrets endangers the lives of those involved, one journalist observes that “speculative blood became worse than real blood.”

6 When news leaked of Coolidge's hobby horse in 1925, pundits opined that his predecessor, Theodore Roosevelt, would be dismayed.

7 You probably know this cultural superstar as the author of “The Name of the Rose” and “Foucault’s Pendulum,” but Eco was also an erudite academician and pundit.

8 Many pundits were disappointed that the device remained largely the same -- at least on the outside -- as the iPhone 4, which debuted 15 months ago.

9 There’s no need for literary or political pundits to bring in the defibrillators.

10 Politicians and pundits even feel obliged to pepper their communications with references to them.

11 The pundits in the studios noted, further, how the Republicans on the committees seemed to be burnishing their clip reels as if pursuing, inexorably, multiyear contracts on Fox News.

12 “The thing about leaving the field is that you become a permanent armchair pundit,” Mr. Detrick said, laughing.

13 In January 2008 he was told the number of days he would be working would be considerably reduced, which left the pundit "furious".

14 Providing the play-by-play of that debacle and more are the a cappella pundits John and Gail, played John Michael Higgins and Elizabeth Banks, both excellent snipers and fully loaded with caustic lines.

15 Right wing pundits often warn of “America becoming Mexico” — if only.

16 Washington Post columnist Eugene Robinson, for years a paid pundit for MSNBC, said as a journalist, he would “never” accept talking points or “coordinate” his opinions with any vested interest.

17 But, hard as it is to believe, there was actually a time not too many years ago when people really believed that Colbert was an in-earnest conservative pundit.

18 Instead, networks and pundits have chosen instead to focus on the political and sensational aspects of the virus’ journey to the United States: Why didn’t Obama seal our borders?

19 There was no time to check out what pundits were saying about the predicted “red wave,” and Ms. Henry and other staff members assiduously tuned out the news.

20 Unsurprisingly, conservative pundits couldn’t wait to claim her as patron saint.

pundit 同义词

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