释义 |
Definition of lockstep in English: lockstepnoun ˈlɒkstɛpˈläkˌstep mass nounNorth American 1A way of marching with each person as close as possible to the one in front. 紧密行进(行进队伍中与前面的人尽量靠近的行进方式) the trio marched in lockstep 这一伙三个人前脚接后脚地鱼贯而行。 Example sentencesExamples - Narcissism and materialism were both drawn in sharp contrast to nihilism, but in the end the important thing was not to march in lockstep to the beat of any drummer.
- Imagine the effect it would have on the crowd - all those handsome young heroes, marching in perfect lockstep, showing their loyalty to their commander in chief.
- They dance and walk sideways in lockstep and do all the things they've been trained to do.
- 1.1 Close adherence to and emulation of another's actions.
they raised prices in lockstep with those of foreign competitors Example sentencesExamples - Or students can enrol in the lockstep program where they take no more than six credit hours per semester and complete the program in five semesters.
- You can't take a linear, lockstep pace in this situation.
- I think there are risks for us in being too much in lockstep with the United States, and I think in this period that that is something we should think very carefully about and review carefully.
- One-size-fits-all standardized tests are driving curricula, and top-down reforms are mandating lockstep procedures for classroom instructors.
- She asks us to try to think with the Tradition, using it as a light for reflection, not a slide rule for infallible moral calculus that must always produce monolithic lockstep agreement.
- In lockstep with mistaken corporate practice, some of the current higher education policy wonks argue that tenure needs to be adjusted to make faculty less hard on the leadership of their CEOs.
- TV commentators and print journalists alike have, with rare exceptions, fallen into lockstep behind the administration's campaign of lies.
- The TV stations are giving the images of huge crowds full value; while even newspapers in lockstep with the government are finding it hard to maintain their position; although The Australian battles on gamely.
- With the Democratic Party voting in lockstep with the Republicans, the Senate approved the measure 96 to 0, and the House of Representatives passed it by a vote of 410 to 12.
- The pace of growth between 1901 and 1911 had been so rapid, and there were so few clouds on the horizon, that most people saw the future unfolding in lockstep with the previous decade.
- By crushing the traditions of the Senate he would pack the courts, especially the supreme court, with lockstep ideologues.
- Advertising markets in Asia were growing weaker in lockstep with the slowing U.S. economy.
- In most professions, the best workers usually get the top pay - a situation that once held in teaching, before the unions arrived on the scene and began to mandate lockstep salaries.
- Among them was whether a judge votes in lockstep with other judges nominated by the same political party.
- In lockstep with the two parties in Washington, the state administration places the blame for the crisis in the schools on the teachers and staff members who struggle every day against deteriorating conditions.
- Now it is possible to concentrate income quickly through the globalized financial system which grows in lockstep with the increasing concentration of income upward.
- Certainly we can socialize with people without being in philosophical lockstep with them, as long as you both are open to developing either a mutally respectful or a hilariously meanspirited dialogue about your differences.
- It may have been cheeky to argue for lockstep loyalty to a rightwing Republican administration by invoking the great anti-fascist struggles of the last century, but it worked.
- You know, I don't have to get in lockstep with a party, and I don't have to hire party cronies.
- And that in itself will persuade the allies to fall into lockstep.
Definition of lockstep in US English: lockstepnounˈläkˌstep North American 1A way of marching with each person as close as possible to the one in front. 紧密行进(行进队伍中与前面的人尽量靠近的行进方式) the trio marched in lockstep 这一伙三个人前脚接后脚地鱼贯而行。 as adverb hundreds of shaven-headed youths march lockstep into the stadium 几百个剃光头的年轻人一个紧接着一个地走进了体育场。 Example sentencesExamples - They dance and walk sideways in lockstep and do all the things they've been trained to do.
- Imagine the effect it would have on the crowd - all those handsome young heroes, marching in perfect lockstep, showing their loyalty to their commander in chief.
- Narcissism and materialism were both drawn in sharp contrast to nihilism, but in the end the important thing was not to march in lockstep to the beat of any drummer.
- 1.1 Close adherence to and emulation of another's actions.
they raised prices in lockstep with those of foreign competitors as modifier the party touted a lockstep unity Example sentencesExamples - The TV stations are giving the images of huge crowds full value; while even newspapers in lockstep with the government are finding it hard to maintain their position; although The Australian battles on gamely.
- I think there are risks for us in being too much in lockstep with the United States, and I think in this period that that is something we should think very carefully about and review carefully.
- One-size-fits-all standardized tests are driving curricula, and top-down reforms are mandating lockstep procedures for classroom instructors.
- Certainly we can socialize with people without being in philosophical lockstep with them, as long as you both are open to developing either a mutally respectful or a hilariously meanspirited dialogue about your differences.
- TV commentators and print journalists alike have, with rare exceptions, fallen into lockstep behind the administration's campaign of lies.
- With the Democratic Party voting in lockstep with the Republicans, the Senate approved the measure 96 to 0, and the House of Representatives passed it by a vote of 410 to 12.
- She asks us to try to think with the Tradition, using it as a light for reflection, not a slide rule for infallible moral calculus that must always produce monolithic lockstep agreement.
- In most professions, the best workers usually get the top pay - a situation that once held in teaching, before the unions arrived on the scene and began to mandate lockstep salaries.
- And that in itself will persuade the allies to fall into lockstep.
- Or students can enrol in the lockstep program where they take no more than six credit hours per semester and complete the program in five semesters.
- It may have been cheeky to argue for lockstep loyalty to a rightwing Republican administration by invoking the great anti-fascist struggles of the last century, but it worked.
- You can't take a linear, lockstep pace in this situation.
- By crushing the traditions of the Senate he would pack the courts, especially the supreme court, with lockstep ideologues.
- Among them was whether a judge votes in lockstep with other judges nominated by the same political party.
- Now it is possible to concentrate income quickly through the globalized financial system which grows in lockstep with the increasing concentration of income upward.
- The pace of growth between 1901 and 1911 had been so rapid, and there were so few clouds on the horizon, that most people saw the future unfolding in lockstep with the previous decade.
- In lockstep with the two parties in Washington, the state administration places the blame for the crisis in the schools on the teachers and staff members who struggle every day against deteriorating conditions.
- You know, I don't have to get in lockstep with a party, and I don't have to hire party cronies.
- In lockstep with mistaken corporate practice, some of the current higher education policy wonks argue that tenure needs to be adjusted to make faculty less hard on the leadership of their CEOs.
- Advertising markets in Asia were growing weaker in lockstep with the slowing U.S. economy.
|