centrist
英 [ˈsentrɪst]
美 [ˈsentrɪst]
n. (政治上的)中间派,温和派
adj. 温和派的
复数:centrists
Collins.1 / BNC.26137 / COCA.13442
牛津词典
noun
- (政治上的)中间派,温和派
a person with political views that are not extreme
柯林斯词典
- ADJ-GRADED (政策或政党)温和的,中间派的
Centristpolicies and parties are moderate rather than extreme.- He had left the movement because it had abandoned its centrist policies.
他退出了该运动,因为它放弃了温和政策。 - Acentristis someone with centrist views.
持温和立场的人;中间派(人物)
- He had left the movement because it had abandoned its centrist policies.
英英释义
noun
- a person who takes a position in the political center
adj
- supporting or pursuing a course of action that is neither liberal nor conservative
双语例句
- With weakened allies in Congress, he would have to be a centrist president or an outright failure.
当他在国会的盟友遭到削弱时,他将不得不成为一个中间派总统,否则就将一败涂地。 - The fiscal stimulus, too, was a centrist initiative.
财政刺激方案也是一种中间派举措。 - The best result would be for Mr Monti to stay on as prime minister. He is running on a pro-reform ticket backed by a coalition of centrist parties.
最好的结果就是蒙蒂先生留任总理,他现在正在中间党联盟的支持下打改革牌。 - Unlike Bill Clinton, an instinctive centrist, Mr Obama is a progressive liberal.
与天生的中间派比尔克林顿(billclinton)不同,奥巴马是一个进步的自由派人士。 - What this tells us about Mr Cameron is that he is a Conservative in the centrist tradition of Harold MacMillan rather than a radical such as Margaret Thatcher. A moderate in most things is how one colleague describes him.
这告诉我们,卡梅伦是一位继承哈罗德麦克米伦(HaroldMacMillan)之中间派衣钵的保守党人,而不是像玛格丽特撒切尔(MargaretThatcher)那样的激进分子。一位同事称他在大多数事情上都持温和意见。 - He had left the movement because it had abandoned its centrist policies.
他退出了该运动,因为它放弃了温和政策。 - She has remodelled herself as an impeccably centrist senator, co-sponsoring bills with prominent conservatives.
她把自己重塑成一个完美的中间派议员,总是附议那些著名保守派人士的议案。 - Israel's centrist Kadima Party has signed a coalition deal with the ultra-Orthodox Shas Party, clearing the way for a parliamentary majority.
以色列持中间立场的前进党同极端正统派的沙斯党签署了一项联合协议,从而扫清了获得议会多数的道路。 - He said he would leave to form a new centrist movement.
他表示将自行建立一个新的中间派。 - Labour, and Thatcher's centrist predecessors among the Conservatives, had tried to control inflation administratively, through various deals with unions and employers to hold down wages and prices; Labour had, under pressure from the IMF, cut spending.
工党和保守党中撒切尔的温和派前辈力图通过行政抑制通胀,通过与工会和雇主们达成各种交易来降低工资和物价。由于受到IMF的很大压力,工党削减了开支。
