释义 |
Definition of parliamentarian in English: parliamentariannoun ˌpɑːləm(ə)nˈtɛːrɪənˌpɑːləmɛnˈtɛːrɪənˌpɑrləmənˈtɛriən 1A member of a parliament, especially one well versed in its procedure and experienced in debate. (尤指熟悉议会程序、擅长辩论的)议员 the Prime Minister and the Foreign Secretary are sound parliamentarians Example sentencesExamples - Mary's unprepared speech put even the most experienced parliamentarians to shame.
- This Labour Party has no regard for history, and no regard for the rights of this Parliament or parliamentarians.
- In December this year, the British Council will bring 200 parliamentarians and staff to the Chamber to debate governance in today's world.
- As a parliamentarian, he used to interact with Members of Parliament from India, at the Inter-Parliamentary Union.
- The President shall appoint a parliamentarian to provide parliamentary opinion during meetings of the Advisory Councils and the annual business meeting of the Association.
- The ‘standing ovation’ he was given by parliamentarians and members of the government was a signal of German agreement.
- So I urge parliamentarians, when they debate issues such as this, to consider the journey ahead.
- There would be an awful lot of litigation to decide what Parliament meant by allowing parliamentarians to say some sort of thing outside the House.
- In public hearings, parliamentarians debated the issues, and not always along strict party lines.
- As a professed radical, he was to prove a singularly jaded observer of parliaments, parliamentary processes, and parliamentarians.
- Attendees can make appointments with members of the Board of Directors, headquarters staff members, and the parliamentarian.
- An experienced parliamentarian, Khan has contributed immensely not only to the deliberations of various committees he had served but also to the proceedings of the House.
- Overnight she told the nation that she will not allow it, because parliamentarians come to Parliament to make decisions.
- The trouble is that this Parliament has so many parliamentarians with a rather scurrilous record of consistency on these matters.
- The High Authority was further advised by a general assembly made up of parliamentarians from the member states.
- When I first came in to parliament, most parliamentarians were elderly men.
- Local bills come before Parliament only if a parliamentarian is willing to sponsor them.
- The targets included state actors, parliamentarians and members of the executive and the broader Canadian public.
- Neither the candidates nor the people seem to know what is expected of them as parliamentarians or as members of legislatures.
- The prime minister and other parliamentarians were brutalized and the capital was the scene of heavy rioting.
2historical A supporter of Parliament in the English Civil War; a Roundhead. 〈史〉(英国内战时期支持议会的)议会党人,圆颅党人 her family were prominent and staunch parliamentarians Example sentencesExamples - England was soon engaged in a civil war between the parliamentarians and the royalists.
- Knollys was a prominent courtier and parliamentarian during Elizabeth I's reign.
adjective ˌpɑːləm(ə)nˈtɛːrɪənˌpɑːləmɛnˈtɛːrɪənˌpɑrləmənˈtɛriən 1Relating to a parliament or its members. (与)议会(有关)的;(与)议员(有关)的 parliamentarian committees 议会委员会。 Example sentencesExamples - All the social improvements in Britain did take place through a parliamentarian system, they did take place gradually, and they had an awful lot to do with local politics in which he was very prominent.
- Also, a candidate and parliamentarian training program began on March 14; attendance is 30-40 participants per day.
- ‘Since the foreign ministry will play a key role leading the foundation, it would be much more appropriate for the unit to focus on party diplomacy and parliamentarian diplomacy,’ Chen said.
- All who are participating in the new process for democratization in Iraq, for having a democratic, federative, parliamentarian system, they are our friends.
- As late as the end of the 1920's the word ‘totalitarian’ was used to designate any state which was governed in an authoritarian rather than a parliamentarian manner.
- Women activists, including Cabinet ministers, have also joined in the fight for women representation in key positions and have thus, formed a parliamentarian women's caucus group.
- Dominica has a British parliamentarian system of government, headed by a president and prime minister.
- There is full political, parliamentarian and public consensus on EU and NATO membership in Bulgaria, Purvanov said.
- The North Korean delegation is also expected to get in contact with the Japanese government and politicians forming a parliamentarian league for Japan-North Korea friendship.
- Like the lot of them, they just want to protect their cushy parliamentarian jobs.
- On paper the government works under the presidential system, but in practice, we exercise a parliamentarian system.
- In 1990, Mongolia became a free and democratic country with a multi-party parliamentarian system under a president.
- A demoralized royalist party licked its wounds and tried to pay off its debts; a dejected majority of the old parliamentarian party grudgingly did what they were told but little more.
- It's something close to parliamentarian maneuvering.
2historical Relating to the Roundheads. 〈史〉(与)圆颅党人(有关)的 parliamentarian sympathies 议会委员会。 Example sentencesExamples - As he lay dying, he suddenly realised to his horror that he had been shot by his own brother, who was a member of the parliamentarian garrison.
- There was a parliamentarian school of thought; the idea that you could do without a king.
- Medals were worn in the 17th century by both Dutch and Swedish troops engaged in the Thirty Years War, and British parliamentarian troops who fought at Dunbar in 1650 were awarded a medal for that event.
- Others holding more parliamentarian sentiments tended to invert this royalist formulation.
- Gadbury, conversely, rejected his early parliamentarian sympathies, became an ardent royalist, and flourished after the Restoration of 1660.
Rhymesagrarian, antiquarian, apiarian, Aquarian, Arian, Aryan, authoritarian, barbarian, Bavarian, Bulgarian, Caesarean (US Cesarean), centenarian, communitarian, contrarian, Darien, disciplinarian, egalitarian, equalitarian, establishmentarian, fruitarian, Gibraltarian, grammarian, Hanoverian, humanitarian, Hungarian, latitudinarian, libertarian, librarian, majoritarian, millenarian, necessarian, necessitarian, nonagenarian, octogenarian, ovarian, Parian, planarian, predestinarian, prelapsarian, proletarian, quadragenarian, quinquagenarian, quodlibetarian, Rastafarian, riparian, rosarian, Rotarian, sabbatarian, Sagittarian, sanitarian, Sauveterrian, sectarian, seminarian, septuagenarian, sexagenarian, topiarian, totalitarian, Trinitarian, ubiquitarian, Unitarian, utilitarian, valetudinarian, vegetarian, veterinarian, vulgarian Definition of parliamentarian in US English: parliamentariannounˌpärləmənˈterēənˌpɑrləmənˈtɛriən 1A member of a parliament, especially one well versed in parliamentary procedure and experienced in debate. (尤指熟悉议会程序、擅长辩论的)议员 Example sentencesExamples - Local bills come before Parliament only if a parliamentarian is willing to sponsor them.
- An experienced parliamentarian, Khan has contributed immensely not only to the deliberations of various committees he had served but also to the proceedings of the House.
- The High Authority was further advised by a general assembly made up of parliamentarians from the member states.
- This Labour Party has no regard for history, and no regard for the rights of this Parliament or parliamentarians.
- So I urge parliamentarians, when they debate issues such as this, to consider the journey ahead.
- Neither the candidates nor the people seem to know what is expected of them as parliamentarians or as members of legislatures.
- As a professed radical, he was to prove a singularly jaded observer of parliaments, parliamentary processes, and parliamentarians.
- There would be an awful lot of litigation to decide what Parliament meant by allowing parliamentarians to say some sort of thing outside the House.
- When I first came in to parliament, most parliamentarians were elderly men.
- The prime minister and other parliamentarians were brutalized and the capital was the scene of heavy rioting.
- In public hearings, parliamentarians debated the issues, and not always along strict party lines.
- The ‘standing ovation’ he was given by parliamentarians and members of the government was a signal of German agreement.
- The targets included state actors, parliamentarians and members of the executive and the broader Canadian public.
- Overnight she told the nation that she will not allow it, because parliamentarians come to Parliament to make decisions.
- As a parliamentarian, he used to interact with Members of Parliament from India, at the Inter-Parliamentary Union.
- Mary's unprepared speech put even the most experienced parliamentarians to shame.
- In December this year, the British Council will bring 200 parliamentarians and staff to the Chamber to debate governance in today's world.
- The trouble is that this Parliament has so many parliamentarians with a rather scurrilous record of consistency on these matters.
- Attendees can make appointments with members of the Board of Directors, headquarters staff members, and the parliamentarian.
- The President shall appoint a parliamentarian to provide parliamentary opinion during meetings of the Advisory Councils and the annual business meeting of the Association.
2historical A supporter of Parliament in the English Civil War; a Roundhead. 〈史〉(英国内战时期支持议会的)议会党人,圆颅党人 Example sentencesExamples - Knollys was a prominent courtier and parliamentarian during Elizabeth I's reign.
- England was soon engaged in a civil war between the parliamentarians and the royalists.
adjectiveˌpärləmənˈterēənˌpɑrləmənˈtɛriən 1Relating to a parliament or its members. (与)议会(有关)的;(与)议员(有关)的 parliamentarian committees 议会委员会。 Example sentencesExamples - In 1990, Mongolia became a free and democratic country with a multi-party parliamentarian system under a president.
- Like the lot of them, they just want to protect their cushy parliamentarian jobs.
- It's something close to parliamentarian maneuvering.
- All who are participating in the new process for democratization in Iraq, for having a democratic, federative, parliamentarian system, they are our friends.
- All the social improvements in Britain did take place through a parliamentarian system, they did take place gradually, and they had an awful lot to do with local politics in which he was very prominent.
- On paper the government works under the presidential system, but in practice, we exercise a parliamentarian system.
- Women activists, including Cabinet ministers, have also joined in the fight for women representation in key positions and have thus, formed a parliamentarian women's caucus group.
- There is full political, parliamentarian and public consensus on EU and NATO membership in Bulgaria, Purvanov said.
- A demoralized royalist party licked its wounds and tried to pay off its debts; a dejected majority of the old parliamentarian party grudgingly did what they were told but little more.
- ‘Since the foreign ministry will play a key role leading the foundation, it would be much more appropriate for the unit to focus on party diplomacy and parliamentarian diplomacy,’ Chen said.
- Dominica has a British parliamentarian system of government, headed by a president and prime minister.
- Also, a candidate and parliamentarian training program began on March 14; attendance is 30-40 participants per day.
- The North Korean delegation is also expected to get in contact with the Japanese government and politicians forming a parliamentarian league for Japan-North Korea friendship.
- As late as the end of the 1920's the word ‘totalitarian’ was used to designate any state which was governed in an authoritarian rather than a parliamentarian manner.
2historical Relating to the Roundheads. 〈史〉(与)圆颅党人(有关)的 Example sentencesExamples - There was a parliamentarian school of thought; the idea that you could do without a king.
- Gadbury, conversely, rejected his early parliamentarian sympathies, became an ardent royalist, and flourished after the Restoration of 1660.
- Others holding more parliamentarian sentiments tended to invert this royalist formulation.
- Medals were worn in the 17th century by both Dutch and Swedish troops engaged in the Thirty Years War, and British parliamentarian troops who fought at Dunbar in 1650 were awarded a medal for that event.
- As he lay dying, he suddenly realised to his horror that he had been shot by his own brother, who was a member of the parliamentarian garrison.
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