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词汇 interventionist
释义

Definition of interventionist in English:

interventionist

adjectiveɪntəˈvɛnʃ(ə)nɪstˌɪn(t)ərˈvɛn(t)ʃ(ə)nəst
  • Favouring intervention, especially by a government in its domestic economy or by one state in the affairs of another.

    干涉主义的(尤指政府对经济事务或一国对别国)

    an economy currently dominated by state ownership and interventionist policies
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Most of the rest are either relatively secure or continually hampered by the interventionist policies going back nearly a century.
    • This view is inadequate today because it ignores the role of organized mass parties, pressure groups, a large Civil Service, and interventionist government.
    • Even though there has been an increase in the black middle class, the psychology of the group is still liberal, still supportive of big, interventionist government.
    • Workers' capital could then be invested with a view to longer term goals, acting as an instrument for the development of a more actively interventionist industry policy.
    • He added the market would be happier to see US policy move away from interventionist moves, such as the tariffs announced this week.
    • Thus, for example, the foreign policies of Britain in the nineteenth century and the United States in the twentieth century have included strong interventionist components.
    • If we waited for every government in the world to stop manipulating domestic production through interventionist measures, no country would have ever traded with any other.
    • Their social exclusion is produced by the industrial and residential location processes inherent in all capitalist societies unless interventionist policies are put in place which remedy them.
    • Who is feeding the president this interventionist nonsense?
    • Further, it has been suggested that the globalization of the world economy is making interventionist policies less meaningful.
    • The interventionist model of economic development they espoused - and that the United Kingdom generally opposed - had run out of steam.
    • In this way, peace settlements have become increasingly interventionist into the social and political forms of the vanquished.
    • It actually fuels the logic of intervention, providing grist for interventionist rationales.
    • The Report concludes with a synthesis of the issues and a plea for government to play an even more interventionist role in the second economy.
    • Free market policies lead to greater economic growth than interventionist policies, and therefore also lead to greater income inequality.
    • Hoover was a corporatist, an inflationist, and a statist who tried every policy in the interventionist playbook.
    • It serves a useful function also where the issues are neatly adversative - tax and social spending versus tax cuts to stimulate the economy, or interventionist government versus minimalist government.
    • It was no mistake that the only decade to rival the 1930s in terms of prolonged market malaise was the 1970s, another era defined by interventionist wage and price policies.
    • So, of course, a less interventionist government, economically and socially, is going to appeal to them.
    • In time, this may require the UN to consider co-operative, interventionist action in potential or active trouble spots.
nounɪntəˈvɛnʃ(ə)nɪstˌɪn(t)ərˈvɛn(t)ʃ(ə)nəst
  • A person in favour of interventionism.

    干涉主义者

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Following the intervention, interventionists completed a checklist measure of family characteristics that was designed to identify issues that might interfere with intervention effectiveness.
    • Instead, New Zealanders tend to be pragmatic interventionists.
    • Bashing the UN is an issue that allows the unilateral interventionists to ring the till, gathering support from paleocon isolationists across the country.
    • Early interventionists must collaborate closely with the family; working with the child in isolation cannot be expected to have much, if any, impact since infants and toddlers cannot generalize information.
    • It will be harder to obtain modern economic and political institutions in the Middle East than in other parts of the world, and much harder than the neo-conservative interventionists appear to assume.
    • Similar to the desire of humanitarian interventionists, proponents would argue that morality requires us to act, regardless of cost.
    • Ultimately, Wilsonianism would find support mainly among the small current of democratic interventionists.
    • Enlightened self-interest, then, is the cri de coeur of the liberal interventionists.
    • Traders will test the resolve of interventionists like never before.
    • Using the same definition of progress that the socialists and interventionists use, value-free economics shows that where socialism and interventionism cannot succeed, laissez faire can.
    • On the other hand, it is impressive that intervention effects can be replicated across cohorts when initial enthusiasm for the intervention among interventionists and teachers might be expected to wane.
    • So it isn't just, you know, interventionists doing interventions.
    • Given the lack of research in this area, early interventionists often rely on intervention practices designed for Anglo American infants and toddlers from English-speaking homes.
    • And in the United States, the Chile myth teaches contemporary interventionists that regime change works.
    • The interventionists, on the contrary, believe that government has the power to improve the masses' standard of living partly at the expense of the capitalists and entrepreneurs, partly at no expense at all.
    • It isn't the power of the oppressors that interventionists have to worry about, but the amorphousness of the oppression.
    • My professors were either socialists or interventionists.
    • And there's also the need for psychologists to work with the various therapists and interventionists who surround a child, from teachers to speech therapists and occupational therapists.
    • The unilateral interventionists still hold the reins of power within the GOP, largely because their champions dominate the West Wing and the Department of Defense.
    • Efforts were made to match interventionists and families on ethnicity, and Spanish-speaking interventionists were paired with Spanish-speaking families.

Derivatives

  • interventionism

  • nounɪntəˈvɛnʃənɪz(ə)mˌɪn(t)ərˈvɛn(t)ʃəˌnɪzəm
    • Although peacemaking allows a greater interventionism and activism in the construction of international order than at other historical periods, the results of these endeavours remain uncertain.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • And the two sides would also come together over a new doctrine of enlightened interventionism in Africa.
      • Influenced by the nation's new status as the world's sole superpower, rabid interventionism became publicly acceptable.
      • The last decade of the twentieth century saw an unprecedented increase in the number and scale of military interventions by United Nations forces: this has been called the new interventionism.
      • Aware that some of its European partners are not willing to the recognise the principle of interventionism, the British government is also seeking partners for its project outside of the EU.

Definition of interventionist in US English:

interventionist

adjectiveˌɪn(t)ərˈvɛn(t)ʃ(ə)nəstˌin(t)ərˈven(t)SH(ə)nəst
  • Favoring intervention, especially by a government in its domestic economy or by one country in the affairs of another.

    干涉主义的(尤指政府对经济事务或一国对别国)

    an economy currently dominated by state ownership and interventionist policies
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Further, it has been suggested that the globalization of the world economy is making interventionist policies less meaningful.
    • Workers' capital could then be invested with a view to longer term goals, acting as an instrument for the development of a more actively interventionist industry policy.
    • This view is inadequate today because it ignores the role of organized mass parties, pressure groups, a large Civil Service, and interventionist government.
    • It was no mistake that the only decade to rival the 1930s in terms of prolonged market malaise was the 1970s, another era defined by interventionist wage and price policies.
    • Even though there has been an increase in the black middle class, the psychology of the group is still liberal, still supportive of big, interventionist government.
    • Who is feeding the president this interventionist nonsense?
    • Free market policies lead to greater economic growth than interventionist policies, and therefore also lead to greater income inequality.
    • The Report concludes with a synthesis of the issues and a plea for government to play an even more interventionist role in the second economy.
    • It actually fuels the logic of intervention, providing grist for interventionist rationales.
    • Hoover was a corporatist, an inflationist, and a statist who tried every policy in the interventionist playbook.
    • Most of the rest are either relatively secure or continually hampered by the interventionist policies going back nearly a century.
    • So, of course, a less interventionist government, economically and socially, is going to appeal to them.
    • The interventionist model of economic development they espoused - and that the United Kingdom generally opposed - had run out of steam.
    • In this way, peace settlements have become increasingly interventionist into the social and political forms of the vanquished.
    • He added the market would be happier to see US policy move away from interventionist moves, such as the tariffs announced this week.
    • Their social exclusion is produced by the industrial and residential location processes inherent in all capitalist societies unless interventionist policies are put in place which remedy them.
    • Thus, for example, the foreign policies of Britain in the nineteenth century and the United States in the twentieth century have included strong interventionist components.
    • It serves a useful function also where the issues are neatly adversative - tax and social spending versus tax cuts to stimulate the economy, or interventionist government versus minimalist government.
    • If we waited for every government in the world to stop manipulating domestic production through interventionist measures, no country would have ever traded with any other.
    • In time, this may require the UN to consider co-operative, interventionist action in potential or active trouble spots.
nounˌɪn(t)ərˈvɛn(t)ʃ(ə)nəstˌin(t)ərˈven(t)SH(ə)nəst
  • A person who favors government intervention.

    干涉主义者

    Example sentencesExamples
    • The interventionists, on the contrary, believe that government has the power to improve the masses' standard of living partly at the expense of the capitalists and entrepreneurs, partly at no expense at all.
    • Following the intervention, interventionists completed a checklist measure of family characteristics that was designed to identify issues that might interfere with intervention effectiveness.
    • It isn't the power of the oppressors that interventionists have to worry about, but the amorphousness of the oppression.
    • The unilateral interventionists still hold the reins of power within the GOP, largely because their champions dominate the West Wing and the Department of Defense.
    • Similar to the desire of humanitarian interventionists, proponents would argue that morality requires us to act, regardless of cost.
    • Given the lack of research in this area, early interventionists often rely on intervention practices designed for Anglo American infants and toddlers from English-speaking homes.
    • Bashing the UN is an issue that allows the unilateral interventionists to ring the till, gathering support from paleocon isolationists across the country.
    • Early interventionists must collaborate closely with the family; working with the child in isolation cannot be expected to have much, if any, impact since infants and toddlers cannot generalize information.
    • And there's also the need for psychologists to work with the various therapists and interventionists who surround a child, from teachers to speech therapists and occupational therapists.
    • My professors were either socialists or interventionists.
    • It will be harder to obtain modern economic and political institutions in the Middle East than in other parts of the world, and much harder than the neo-conservative interventionists appear to assume.
    • Enlightened self-interest, then, is the cri de coeur of the liberal interventionists.
    • Traders will test the resolve of interventionists like never before.
    • Ultimately, Wilsonianism would find support mainly among the small current of democratic interventionists.
    • On the other hand, it is impressive that intervention effects can be replicated across cohorts when initial enthusiasm for the intervention among interventionists and teachers might be expected to wane.
    • And in the United States, the Chile myth teaches contemporary interventionists that regime change works.
    • So it isn't just, you know, interventionists doing interventions.
    • Using the same definition of progress that the socialists and interventionists use, value-free economics shows that where socialism and interventionism cannot succeed, laissez faire can.
    • Instead, New Zealanders tend to be pragmatic interventionists.
    • Efforts were made to match interventionists and families on ethnicity, and Spanish-speaking interventionists were paired with Spanish-speaking families.
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