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词汇 blacklist
释义

Definition of blacklist in English:

blacklist

noun ˈblaklɪstˈblækˌlɪst
  • A list of people or things that are regarded as unacceptable or untrustworthy and should be excluded or avoided.

    黑名单

    he was placed on a blacklist which meant he was unable to get credit
    a blacklist of blocked websites
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Inclusion on the blacklist, which could be proposed shortly, could make it difficult for the bank to do business internationally.
    • If they list a URL in the comment that is on the blacklist, then they get blocked.
    • Anti-spam systems also keep blacklists of known spammers, as well as lists of approved senders.
    • This is one of the books of the year, a lucid history of the Communist Party in Hollywood through the period of the blacklist.
    • Critics of the blacklist have set up a website highlighting their grievances against the popular service.
    • It allows the attorney general to create a blacklist of organisations for their involvement in terrorism and allows the country to deport or bar entry to anyone connected with those groups.
    • The bank, which is on the US blacklist, has branches across the Middle East that continue to operate.
    • We do make our blacklist publicly available so anyone can check if we are banning sites critical towards us.
    • I know what she means when she says that a blacklist will never be an effective, long-term solution to an internet-based problem.
    • The browser adjusts its security settings automatically, based on a regularly-updated blacklist of dangerous or malicious sites.
    • But thanks to the blacklist, hundreds of others are being tarred with the same brush, and thousands will be over the next few years.
    • The government is creating a force that will suppress the criminally influential, but many have escaped the blacklist whether through influence or virtue.
    • As a result of the Liberal party's stance against the war, Canada finds itself, alongside many European states, on the blacklist of their most powerful ally.
    • A type of pattern-matching filter, Bayesian filters don't require whitelists or blacklists.
    • The new rules would allow the agency to create a blacklist of material deemed seriously dangerous to children.
    • In the real world, however, there are no prematurely ended careers so far, no blacklists, no gulags for the dissidents.
    • The infamous blacklist was already being compiled, and the subject matter of the movie could have made him suspect.
    • They've even published a blacklist of spamblogs to help indexing services weed them out.
    • The Popular Front period would fade into history, eclipsed by the war, the McCarthy period, the blacklist, the cold war.
    • They create blacklists and urge their readers and fellow bloggers to threaten and harass their targets.
verb ˈblaklɪstˈblækˌlɪst
[with object]
  • Put on a blacklist.

    把…列入黑名单

    workers were blacklisted after being quoted in the newspaper
    blacklisted books
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Taking a serious note of the incident, the president blacklisted the Indian actor for his remarks.
    • Those who refused to return to their teams were blacklisted from baseball.
    • From that day on I was blacklisted by both him and the head elder.
    • Well, I've blacklisted the sites and deleted the offending comments.
    • I was blacklisted, pushed out, everybody who talked to me was humiliated.
    • Despite the fact that Arbuckle was later acquitted of manslaughter after two hung juries, he was essentially blacklisted from Hollywood.
    • During the 1930s he was blacklisted as a union activist and never got work.
    • Once the highest paid actor in Hollywood, he was blacklisted by the film industry and died penniless in 1943 at the age of 46.
    • I would not participate in a phoney election and accepted the alternative - being blacklisted and placed under surveillance.
    • He was blacklisted during the McCarthy years and subsequently suffered a severe nervous breakdown.
    • Last year we were blacklisted over copyright violation over a treaty that we signed.
    • If you're blacklisted, he says, you do what you can - just as if you were growing up in Harlem.
    • When he was released, he was effectively blacklisted and unable to find work, forced to drive a taxi with a forged license.
    • As a result, the director was blacklisted in the French film industry for three years.
    • Thousands of Americans were blacklisted during the Cold War.
    • Originally a stage actor in France, he was blacklisted as a result of signing a statement against the French occupation of Algeria.
    • When Kevon told him the story, he blacklisted you and very nearly posted a price on your hide.
    • He said million of poor workers and unemployed were blacklisted by credit bureaus even for owing a small amount of money.
    • Factory owners regularly oblige overtime hours, pregnancy tests, dismiss and blacklist workers suspected of union organizing.
    • Immigration has blacklisted him, which means he can never return to Thailand, citing that he was considered a danger to society.
    Synonyms
    boycott, ostracize, avoid, embargo, place an embargo on, put an embargo on, consider undesirable, steer clear of, ignore

Origin

Early 17th century: from black + list.

Rhymes

backlist

Definition of blacklist in US English:

blacklist

nounˈblækˌlɪstˈblakˌlist
  • A list of people or things that are regarded as unacceptable or untrustworthy and should be excluded or avoided.

    黑名单

    he was placed on a blacklist which meant he was unable to get credit
    a blacklist of blocked websites
    Example sentencesExamples
    • The Popular Front period would fade into history, eclipsed by the war, the McCarthy period, the blacklist, the cold war.
    • This is one of the books of the year, a lucid history of the Communist Party in Hollywood through the period of the blacklist.
    • The new rules would allow the agency to create a blacklist of material deemed seriously dangerous to children.
    • The infamous blacklist was already being compiled, and the subject matter of the movie could have made him suspect.
    • They create blacklists and urge their readers and fellow bloggers to threaten and harass their targets.
    • In the real world, however, there are no prematurely ended careers so far, no blacklists, no gulags for the dissidents.
    • As a result of the Liberal party's stance against the war, Canada finds itself, alongside many European states, on the blacklist of their most powerful ally.
    • They've even published a blacklist of spamblogs to help indexing services weed them out.
    • Inclusion on the blacklist, which could be proposed shortly, could make it difficult for the bank to do business internationally.
    • The bank, which is on the US blacklist, has branches across the Middle East that continue to operate.
    • We do make our blacklist publicly available so anyone can check if we are banning sites critical towards us.
    • I know what she means when she says that a blacklist will never be an effective, long-term solution to an internet-based problem.
    • It allows the attorney general to create a blacklist of organisations for their involvement in terrorism and allows the country to deport or bar entry to anyone connected with those groups.
    • Anti-spam systems also keep blacklists of known spammers, as well as lists of approved senders.
    • The browser adjusts its security settings automatically, based on a regularly-updated blacklist of dangerous or malicious sites.
    • But thanks to the blacklist, hundreds of others are being tarred with the same brush, and thousands will be over the next few years.
    • The government is creating a force that will suppress the criminally influential, but many have escaped the blacklist whether through influence or virtue.
    • A type of pattern-matching filter, Bayesian filters don't require whitelists or blacklists.
    • Critics of the blacklist have set up a website highlighting their grievances against the popular service.
    • If they list a URL in the comment that is on the blacklist, then they get blocked.
verbˈblækˌlɪstˈblakˌlist
[with object]
  • Put on a blacklist.

    把…列入黑名单

    workers were blacklisted after being quoted in the newspaper
    blacklisted books
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Taking a serious note of the incident, the president blacklisted the Indian actor for his remarks.
    • If you're blacklisted, he says, you do what you can - just as if you were growing up in Harlem.
    • Despite the fact that Arbuckle was later acquitted of manslaughter after two hung juries, he was essentially blacklisted from Hollywood.
    • Those who refused to return to their teams were blacklisted from baseball.
    • From that day on I was blacklisted by both him and the head elder.
    • During the 1930s he was blacklisted as a union activist and never got work.
    • Last year we were blacklisted over copyright violation over a treaty that we signed.
    • When he was released, he was effectively blacklisted and unable to find work, forced to drive a taxi with a forged license.
    • I was blacklisted, pushed out, everybody who talked to me was humiliated.
    • He was blacklisted during the McCarthy years and subsequently suffered a severe nervous breakdown.
    • Immigration has blacklisted him, which means he can never return to Thailand, citing that he was considered a danger to society.
    • When Kevon told him the story, he blacklisted you and very nearly posted a price on your hide.
    • As a result, the director was blacklisted in the French film industry for three years.
    • Well, I've blacklisted the sites and deleted the offending comments.
    • Factory owners regularly oblige overtime hours, pregnancy tests, dismiss and blacklist workers suspected of union organizing.
    • Originally a stage actor in France, he was blacklisted as a result of signing a statement against the French occupation of Algeria.
    • I would not participate in a phoney election and accepted the alternative - being blacklisted and placed under surveillance.
    • He said million of poor workers and unemployed were blacklisted by credit bureaus even for owing a small amount of money.
    • Once the highest paid actor in Hollywood, he was blacklisted by the film industry and died penniless in 1943 at the age of 46.
    • Thousands of Americans were blacklisted during the Cold War.
    Synonyms
    boycott, ostracize, avoid, embargo, place an embargo on, put an embargo on, consider undesirable, steer clear of, ignore

Origin

Early 17th century: from black + list.

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