英:[rɪ'strɪkʃənɪst]
美:[rɪ'strɪkʃənɪst]
英:[rɪ'strɪkʃənɪst]
美:[rɪ'strɪkʃənɪst]
noun
a policy or philosophy favoring restriction (as of trade or immigration)
The first known use of restrictionism was in 1840
1 Too many share his rigid restrictionist convictions .
许多人具有和他一样的僵化的限制主义信念。
2 Populists mostly support the policy changes that Donald Trump brought about in the Republican Party — in favor of a more aggressive stance in the culture war, immigration restrictionism, a corporatist turn in economics, and antitrust actions against tech companies.
3 After all the shouting, the reflexive restrictionism of the Trump era has become the default—and Biden, at least, doesn’t want to go back.
4 Views on immigration may appear poles apart, but in truth, Democrats and Republicans alike set artificial limits on immigration based on a sliding scale of restrictionism.
5 Brimelow's book landed just as immigration politics was taking a hard turn toward restrictionism.
6 Once a lonely cause, restrictionism had grown into a mature movement — an intellectual ecosystem of sorts — with groups specializing in areas as diverse as litigation and voter mobilization.
7 For decades, conventional wisdom held that immigration restrictionism was a political loser.
8 On the right, the American Conservative — usually sympathetic to immigration restrictionism — ran an op-ed from a scholar at the Cato Institute, which does not share those views.
9 Peter Navarro and Wilbur Ross are steering him toward a trade war; Stephen Miller, John Kelly, and Jeff Sessions have encouraged his immigration restrictionism.
10 Too many share his rigid restrictionist convictions.
许多人具有和他一样的僵化的限制主义信念.
2 限制
qualifying limiting restrictive confining regulative restrictively astriction condition limit parameter limitation restriction qualification reservation modification contraction stint confinement embargo constriction interdiction interdict circumscription hegge tie qualify clip restrict confine restrain constrict circumscribe entrammel astrict set measures to