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词汇 dissidence
释义

Definition of dissidence in English:

dissidence

noun ˈdɪsɪd(ə)nsˈdɪsədəns
mass noun
  • Protest against official policy.

    对官方政策的反对,持不同政见

    the dissidence of the intellectuals
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Woodrow Wilson's Red Scare was the earliest and most extreme resort to state power in twentieth-century America to suppress labour, political dissidence, and independent thought.
    • One can strip the fifties of its illusive aura of dull conformity without inflating cultural dissidence or generational muscle-flexing into political resistance.
    • Governments all over Europe equated religious dissidence with political opposition and sought to eliminate it, strengthened by the obvious fact that it was their religious duty.
    • The level of dissidence is always a function of how tough the regime is.
    • There is nothing new about dissidence, but no new front is coming up.
    • Luckily for the government, three waves of rebellious dissidence had not coincided.
    • Nobody seemed to know who was putting this out, but its dissidence was a welcome antidote to the blandness of mainstream public radio.
    • It's the difference between protest and dissidence really.
    • But dissidence in both the parties is likely to tilt the fortunes marginally in Naidu's favour.
    • The poetry of dissidence and resistance on the other hand has to create its own space, which is public as well as private, real as well as virtual.
    • The mountains stand as defiant outposts of tradition yet have also always been the homeland of rebellion, dissidence and resistance.
    • But in their countries of asylum, their political dissidence - their very reason for needing to flee - is used to identify them as potential terrorists who deserve to be detained or deported.
    • There seems to me, at least, to be some dissidence, if you will, in this.
    • Sex and violence become rites of passage and initiation which, like the new religious practices, produce a historicity of dissidence and dissent.
    • All difference of opinion is construed as dissidence.
    • In Albania today there is much discussion about the notions of dissidence and dissident status.
    • For many people, it was a ‘wake-up call, ‘which has led to considerable openness, concern, skepticism, and dissidence.’
    • Whether you are subjected to the draconian structure of the military or that of our pernicious government, honest dissidence should always remain constant.
    • A living left-wing principle would need to constantly reinvent itself through creative dissidence.
    • The space for dissidence, previously tiny, is now extinct.
    Synonyms
    disagreement, dissent, disaccord, discord, discontent, disapproval
    opposition, resistance, protest, insurrection, rebellion, sedition

Origin

Mid 17th century: from Latin dissidentia, from dissident- 'sitting apart' (see dissident).

Definition of dissidence in US English:

dissidence

nounˈdɪsədənsˈdisədəns
  • Protest against official policy; dissent.

    对官方政策的反对,持不同政见

    the dissidence of the intellectuals
    Example sentencesExamples
    • All difference of opinion is construed as dissidence.
    • Nobody seemed to know who was putting this out, but its dissidence was a welcome antidote to the blandness of mainstream public radio.
    • There seems to me, at least, to be some dissidence, if you will, in this.
    • Governments all over Europe equated religious dissidence with political opposition and sought to eliminate it, strengthened by the obvious fact that it was their religious duty.
    • Whether you are subjected to the draconian structure of the military or that of our pernicious government, honest dissidence should always remain constant.
    • For many people, it was a ‘wake-up call, ‘which has led to considerable openness, concern, skepticism, and dissidence.’
    • In Albania today there is much discussion about the notions of dissidence and dissident status.
    • Sex and violence become rites of passage and initiation which, like the new religious practices, produce a historicity of dissidence and dissent.
    • It's the difference between protest and dissidence really.
    • The mountains stand as defiant outposts of tradition yet have also always been the homeland of rebellion, dissidence and resistance.
    • Luckily for the government, three waves of rebellious dissidence had not coincided.
    • The level of dissidence is always a function of how tough the regime is.
    • Woodrow Wilson's Red Scare was the earliest and most extreme resort to state power in twentieth-century America to suppress labour, political dissidence, and independent thought.
    • A living left-wing principle would need to constantly reinvent itself through creative dissidence.
    • But dissidence in both the parties is likely to tilt the fortunes marginally in Naidu's favour.
    • One can strip the fifties of its illusive aura of dull conformity without inflating cultural dissidence or generational muscle-flexing into political resistance.
    • But in their countries of asylum, their political dissidence - their very reason for needing to flee - is used to identify them as potential terrorists who deserve to be detained or deported.
    • The space for dissidence, previously tiny, is now extinct.
    • There is nothing new about dissidence, but no new front is coming up.
    • The poetry of dissidence and resistance on the other hand has to create its own space, which is public as well as private, real as well as virtual.
    Synonyms
    disagreement, dissent, disaccord, discord, discontent, disapproval

Origin

Mid 17th century: from Latin dissidentia, from dissident- ‘sitting apart’ (see dissident).

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