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词汇 neutralism
释义

Definition of neutralism in English:

neutralism

noun ˈnjuːtrəlɪz(ə)mˈn(j)utrəˌlɪzəm
mass noun
  • A policy of political neutrality.

    中立政策,中立主义

    the arms deal was likely to encourage neutralism in the area
    Example sentencesExamples
    • His policy of anti-American neutralism, which aimed to keep Cambodia out of the war, led him to permit the Vietnamese Communists to station troops on Cambodian soil.
    • Pacifism absolutises peace at the expense of justice, and neutralism turns fence-sitting into moral superiority.
    • It called on writers and intellectuals to abandon neutralism and say No to Stalin as they had once said No to Hitler.
    • A Gallup poll taken in the United States in September, 1939, showed that 94 per cent of Americans supported neutralism.
    • Once more, then, neutralism was coupled with internationalism to define U.S. military policy.
    • J. Budziszewski outlines the case that toleration depends not on doubt, nor skepticism, nor ethical neutralism, but on belief.
    • In Bombay he reminded his audience that a vote for Congress was also a vote for it, and his, foreign policy of peace and principled neutralism.
    • I say that they stand for neutralism where no such thing is possible or desirable, and I say the hell with it.
    • This attitude arose both from the exigencies of the Cold War, especially the danger that allied states might be tempted by neutralism, and from a heartfelt commitment to democratic procedures.
    • It was the Vietnam War which made Sihanouk's neutralism untenable, as Cambodia was used by Vietminh and Vietcong forces as a supply route from North to South Vietnam, and received its fair share of US carpet bombing in return.
    • But the WEA leadership, uncomfortable with political comment, preferred a blanket adherence to official neutralism, exacerbating strained relations with their energetic editor, William Emrys Williams.
    • Outside these areas, a haze of neutralism or moderate royalism prevailed, inspired by a number of well-established families, who did their best to collect together men and money for the king.
    • It also served as a lever to check any possible German drift to neutralism, and Mitterrand addressed the Bundestag on 20 January 1983 to urge acceptance of the American missiles on their soil.
    • In the twentieth century they went from high-handed neutralism to reluctant participation in a European adventure.
    • Ironically, Scott's conclusions depart from the book's overall revisionist theme, as he describes pragmatic American policies that were not uniformly ranged against Arab nationalism, revolution, and neutralism.
    • Wisner agreed that a standing Congress could pull European opinion away from neutralism, but ordered Lasky and Burnham removed from prominent positions in any ongoing project.
    • Not just communism but ‘anything hostile to British or American policy’ could be the target of joint efforts; the neutralism of France's new newspaper of prestige, Le Monde, was thought to be particularly subversive.
    • Diana Trilling responded to Rahv's review in the July 1956 issue by calling the book an example of the kind of neutralism in world affairs that often masked pro-Communism.
    • Hitchens closed his opening statement by criticizing ‘the tendency of today's left to take refuge in neutralism and isolationism.’
    • Economic growth was the American way of inoculating them against communism, neutralism, socialism, and other potentially anti-American political orientations.

Derivatives

  • neutralist

  • noun & adjective ˈnjuːtrəlɪstˈn(j)utrələst
    • These were paralysed by divisions between followers and opponents of Giolitti, interventionists, and neutralists.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • The subject was ‘accounting and social change: neutralists or partisans.’
      • Daily we are told that the people of Ireland are anti-American (a big lie) or that they are whingeing neutralists (a big lie).
      • Nonetheless, the political struggle between communists, neutralists, and rightists continued.
      • Ditto with defence, although the huffing and puffing by Irish neutralists will seek to suggest that the proposals mean something menacing, when in fact they mean nothing at all.

Definition of neutralism in US English:

neutralism

nounˈn(j)utrəˌlɪzəmˈn(y)o͞otrəˌlizəm
  • A policy of political neutrality.

    中立政策,中立主义

    the arms deal was likely to encourage neutralism in the area
    Example sentencesExamples
    • A Gallup poll taken in the United States in September, 1939, showed that 94 per cent of Americans supported neutralism.
    • Once more, then, neutralism was coupled with internationalism to define U.S. military policy.
    • It also served as a lever to check any possible German drift to neutralism, and Mitterrand addressed the Bundestag on 20 January 1983 to urge acceptance of the American missiles on their soil.
    • His policy of anti-American neutralism, which aimed to keep Cambodia out of the war, led him to permit the Vietnamese Communists to station troops on Cambodian soil.
    • Pacifism absolutises peace at the expense of justice, and neutralism turns fence-sitting into moral superiority.
    • It called on writers and intellectuals to abandon neutralism and say No to Stalin as they had once said No to Hitler.
    • In Bombay he reminded his audience that a vote for Congress was also a vote for it, and his, foreign policy of peace and principled neutralism.
    • I say that they stand for neutralism where no such thing is possible or desirable, and I say the hell with it.
    • In the twentieth century they went from high-handed neutralism to reluctant participation in a European adventure.
    • Economic growth was the American way of inoculating them against communism, neutralism, socialism, and other potentially anti-American political orientations.
    • J. Budziszewski outlines the case that toleration depends not on doubt, nor skepticism, nor ethical neutralism, but on belief.
    • Ironically, Scott's conclusions depart from the book's overall revisionist theme, as he describes pragmatic American policies that were not uniformly ranged against Arab nationalism, revolution, and neutralism.
    • But the WEA leadership, uncomfortable with political comment, preferred a blanket adherence to official neutralism, exacerbating strained relations with their energetic editor, William Emrys Williams.
    • This attitude arose both from the exigencies of the Cold War, especially the danger that allied states might be tempted by neutralism, and from a heartfelt commitment to democratic procedures.
    • It was the Vietnam War which made Sihanouk's neutralism untenable, as Cambodia was used by Vietminh and Vietcong forces as a supply route from North to South Vietnam, and received its fair share of US carpet bombing in return.
    • Diana Trilling responded to Rahv's review in the July 1956 issue by calling the book an example of the kind of neutralism in world affairs that often masked pro-Communism.
    • Wisner agreed that a standing Congress could pull European opinion away from neutralism, but ordered Lasky and Burnham removed from prominent positions in any ongoing project.
    • Not just communism but ‘anything hostile to British or American policy’ could be the target of joint efforts; the neutralism of France's new newspaper of prestige, Le Monde, was thought to be particularly subversive.
    • Outside these areas, a haze of neutralism or moderate royalism prevailed, inspired by a number of well-established families, who did their best to collect together men and money for the king.
    • Hitchens closed his opening statement by criticizing ‘the tendency of today's left to take refuge in neutralism and isolationism.’
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