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词汇 boardroom
释义

Definition of boardroom in English:

boardroom

nounˈbɔːdrʊmˈbɔːdruːm
  • 1A room in which a board of directors of a company or other organization meets regularly.

    董事会(或理事会、委员会)会议室

    as modifier he resigned after boardroom differences
    Example sentencesExamples
    • To add a personal note to this review, ethnography's limits are reached at the boundaries of specific and discreet social worlds, whether they be boardrooms or bar rooms.
    • There are 11 separate conference, meeting and boardrooms, all offering the latest audio-visual and technical facilities.
    • We need to get in those boardrooms, those war rooms, those bastions of decision-making where no designer has ever been before.
    • It has been an American epidemic, an unspoken marketing strategy in boardrooms and front offices all over when it comes to cultivating buyers.
    • The conference centre will have a variety of boardrooms, meeting and syndicate rooms providing the most advanced technology systems.
    • This is ideal for the smaller monitors, allowing it to be used in boardrooms for video conference calls or in your living room.
    • A business centre including translation services is on hand, and two boardrooms and one meeting room provide space for business to be conducted.
    • But what about the upper middle classes who fill up corporate boardrooms, elegant drawing rooms and exclusive clubs?
    • Ministers are already being instructed to relaunch a charm offensive, hitting the boardrooms and factories regularly to sell the government's achievements.
    • When he changed careers, he worked his way up from the mail room to the boardroom.
    • This is why most of them are installed not in the workspaces of the employees, but in boardrooms or conference rooms, where businessmen meet and greet their clients.
    • The tours' starting point will be the players' entrance in the main car park and include trips to both dressing rooms and the boardroom.
    • In the chop houses, boardrooms were big rooms crammed with desks for the brokers and cold-callers.
    • The new extension will include a boardroom and meeting rooms.
    • The business centre comprises of one office room, a boardroom and a number of work stations.
    • A ballroom, two boardrooms and five meeting rooms are also on the cards.
    • From newsrooms to boardrooms to classrooms, America's high priests of culture are working to promote it.
    • This scenario is played out daily in boardrooms, war rooms, presentation centers and other business communications facilities throughout the world.
    • The devil's advocate gambit is extraordinary but certainly not uncommon since it strikes so regularly in the project rooms and boardrooms of corporate America.
    • Raise it for debate in the pub and it's likely to illicit a collective groan, but in boardrooms and dressing rooms it has greater currency.
    1. 1.1 The directors of a company or organization considered collectively.
      全体董事(或理事、委员等)
      conservative American boardrooms
      Example sentencesExamples
      • The uncertainty surrounding the global economy following the collapse in stock markets has sent jitters through all boardrooms.
      • The titans of the boardrooms are dropping like flies.
      • But don't count on a mass conversion experience in German boardrooms.
      • Recently ousted in a boardroom coup, he sought an injunction against his removal and the recruitment of a new managing director.
      • A real conceptual shift is required in the boardrooms of America if they are really to succeed long-term in the new global economy.
      • Yet he isn't known for shaking up boardrooms.
      • Cozy boardrooms at colleges and charities face increasing government scrutiny
      • Most of the popular non-executive directors are propelled into the top boardrooms following a career in business.
      • As this column has outlined in the past, corporate boardrooms have long been plagued by the problem of dead or otherwise inanimate board members.
      • Indeed, the question reverberating around media boardrooms is: How big is big enough?
      • For example, some corporate boardrooms can induce a two dimensional vision of reality with all that implies.
      • The boss went on to say that one of the ways to avoid Irish boardrooms becoming ‘too cosy’ was to draw from the pool of Irish people who were working in senior positions overseas.
      • They are in the showrooms and in the boardrooms that drive our nation's economy - a clear opportunity for both religion and the economy itself.
      • Researchers from Cranfield University say we could reach gender equality in the boardrooms of major corporations within the next seven years.
      • In many boardrooms in corporate America, the senior managers are usually white males.
      • Her name was enough to send panic through Britain's boardrooms.
      • In the event it was a short-lived and unhappy venture, which ended in acrimony after only two years following a boardroom clash.
      • Innovation is an American tradition, but never before has it been such a hot topic across boardrooms.
      • She triggered a massive boardroom rift when she refused to quit until fellow directors agreed to board changes.
      • We asked the cream of Scotland's boardrooms to meet for lunch in Edinburgh.

Definition of boardroom in US English:

boardroom

noun
  • 1A room in which the members of a board meet regularly.

    as modifier he resigned after boardroom differences
    Example sentencesExamples
    • The conference centre will have a variety of boardrooms, meeting and syndicate rooms providing the most advanced technology systems.
    • Ministers are already being instructed to relaunch a charm offensive, hitting the boardrooms and factories regularly to sell the government's achievements.
    • There are 11 separate conference, meeting and boardrooms, all offering the latest audio-visual and technical facilities.
    • But what about the upper middle classes who fill up corporate boardrooms, elegant drawing rooms and exclusive clubs?
    • Raise it for debate in the pub and it's likely to illicit a collective groan, but in boardrooms and dressing rooms it has greater currency.
    • To add a personal note to this review, ethnography's limits are reached at the boundaries of specific and discreet social worlds, whether they be boardrooms or bar rooms.
    • When he changed careers, he worked his way up from the mail room to the boardroom.
    • A business centre including translation services is on hand, and two boardrooms and one meeting room provide space for business to be conducted.
    • A ballroom, two boardrooms and five meeting rooms are also on the cards.
    • In the chop houses, boardrooms were big rooms crammed with desks for the brokers and cold-callers.
    • The devil's advocate gambit is extraordinary but certainly not uncommon since it strikes so regularly in the project rooms and boardrooms of corporate America.
    • The business centre comprises of one office room, a boardroom and a number of work stations.
    • This is why most of them are installed not in the workspaces of the employees, but in boardrooms or conference rooms, where businessmen meet and greet their clients.
    • We need to get in those boardrooms, those war rooms, those bastions of decision-making where no designer has ever been before.
    • The tours' starting point will be the players' entrance in the main car park and include trips to both dressing rooms and the boardroom.
    • This scenario is played out daily in boardrooms, war rooms, presentation centers and other business communications facilities throughout the world.
    • This is ideal for the smaller monitors, allowing it to be used in boardrooms for video conference calls or in your living room.
    • It has been an American epidemic, an unspoken marketing strategy in boardrooms and front offices all over when it comes to cultivating buyers.
    • The new extension will include a boardroom and meeting rooms.
    • From newsrooms to boardrooms to classrooms, America's high priests of culture are working to promote it.
    1. 1.1 The directors of a company or organization considered collectively.
      全体董事(或理事、委员等)
      conservative American boardrooms
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Yet he isn't known for shaking up boardrooms.
      • Researchers from Cranfield University say we could reach gender equality in the boardrooms of major corporations within the next seven years.
      • Recently ousted in a boardroom coup, he sought an injunction against his removal and the recruitment of a new managing director.
      • Cozy boardrooms at colleges and charities face increasing government scrutiny
      • In many boardrooms in corporate America, the senior managers are usually white males.
      • She triggered a massive boardroom rift when she refused to quit until fellow directors agreed to board changes.
      • Most of the popular non-executive directors are propelled into the top boardrooms following a career in business.
      • The uncertainty surrounding the global economy following the collapse in stock markets has sent jitters through all boardrooms.
      • Indeed, the question reverberating around media boardrooms is: How big is big enough?
      • The boss went on to say that one of the ways to avoid Irish boardrooms becoming ‘too cosy’ was to draw from the pool of Irish people who were working in senior positions overseas.
      • A real conceptual shift is required in the boardrooms of America if they are really to succeed long-term in the new global economy.
      • For example, some corporate boardrooms can induce a two dimensional vision of reality with all that implies.
      • We asked the cream of Scotland's boardrooms to meet for lunch in Edinburgh.
      • Her name was enough to send panic through Britain's boardrooms.
      • In the event it was a short-lived and unhappy venture, which ended in acrimony after only two years following a boardroom clash.
      • They are in the showrooms and in the boardrooms that drive our nation's economy - a clear opportunity for both religion and the economy itself.
      • Innovation is an American tradition, but never before has it been such a hot topic across boardrooms.
      • But don't count on a mass conversion experience in German boardrooms.
      • As this column has outlined in the past, corporate boardrooms have long been plagued by the problem of dead or otherwise inanimate board members.
      • The titans of the boardrooms are dropping like flies.
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