释义 |
Definition of open letter in English: open letternoun A letter addressed to a particular person or group of people but intended for publication in a newspaper or journal. 公开信 Example sentencesExamples - Perhaps the half-forgotten genre of open letters written by notable intellectuals and artists in support of the government's policies was revived in part to help the authorities find suitable Public Chamber candidates.
- Attendances have fallen, prompting captain Steve Price to write an open letter imploring fans to come along and support the team.
- It's an open letter to condescending reviewers of comics and mentions your name a couple of times.
- ‘It could only be considered a trend if banks are able to promptly meet demand to open letters of credit to enable importers to meet their commitments, rather than force them to collect their hard currency needs from the market,’ he said.
- On 10 August 1548, the contest which all Italy wanted to see, for the correspondence between the two antagonists had taken the form of open letters, took place in the Church in the Garden of the Frati Zoccolanti in Milan.
- The authors of the open letter do not address these questions.
- One of them, Leslie Hill, warned in an open letter to the community newspaper that the situation could put the foundation's work at risk.
- This week she wrote an open letter to our school newspaper asking whether they should still let Adam play on our baseball team.
- He appended his name to an open letter that appeared in a Munich newspaper, denouncing Thomas Mann as being un-nationalistic.
- He hauled a lawsuit-threatening lawyer into the picture and fired off open letters that pushed every possible button.
- The euro was dangerously premature, they argued in open letters published in major newspapers.
- In open letters to Spanish newspapers and at a massive demonstration in downtown Madrid, Garzón decried the war as illegal, unnecessary, and almost certainly counterproductive in the pursuit of a more pro-Western Middle East.
- Not satisfied with what she characterized as inadequate or ever changing responses, Lu decided to post open letters on the Internet to the general public.
- Rigger specifically cited recent open letters run as newspaper advertisements condemning the dirty campaigning by both sides and bemoaning the failure to address meaningful issues.
- During the Great Terror in the 1930s, the public wrote open letters expressing its hunger for blood.
- Her advice is part of an open letter she has written in a Delhi newspaper on the eve of the team's departure for the grudge series.
- The subsequent response by some of those youths and their parents has prompted me to write the following open letter.
- The NGOs sent an open letter to the President, Parliament and all related public institutions.
- That means somebody has to gather and distribute reliable information, organize petitions, demonstrations, and open letters, lobby the chancery and constituencies who might be able to wield some power.
- My frequent open letters to the Okeford Gazette have likewise come to no avail.
Definition of open letter in US English: open letternounˈōpən ˈledərˈoʊpən ˈlɛdər A letter, often critical, addressed to a particular person or group of people but intended for publication. 公开信 Example sentencesExamples - Her advice is part of an open letter she has written in a Delhi newspaper on the eve of the team's departure for the grudge series.
- He appended his name to an open letter that appeared in a Munich newspaper, denouncing Thomas Mann as being un-nationalistic.
- One of them, Leslie Hill, warned in an open letter to the community newspaper that the situation could put the foundation's work at risk.
- The subsequent response by some of those youths and their parents has prompted me to write the following open letter.
- The euro was dangerously premature, they argued in open letters published in major newspapers.
- Rigger specifically cited recent open letters run as newspaper advertisements condemning the dirty campaigning by both sides and bemoaning the failure to address meaningful issues.
- ‘It could only be considered a trend if banks are able to promptly meet demand to open letters of credit to enable importers to meet their commitments, rather than force them to collect their hard currency needs from the market,’ he said.
- He hauled a lawsuit-threatening lawyer into the picture and fired off open letters that pushed every possible button.
- Not satisfied with what she characterized as inadequate or ever changing responses, Lu decided to post open letters on the Internet to the general public.
- Attendances have fallen, prompting captain Steve Price to write an open letter imploring fans to come along and support the team.
- The NGOs sent an open letter to the President, Parliament and all related public institutions.
- That means somebody has to gather and distribute reliable information, organize petitions, demonstrations, and open letters, lobby the chancery and constituencies who might be able to wield some power.
- During the Great Terror in the 1930s, the public wrote open letters expressing its hunger for blood.
- The authors of the open letter do not address these questions.
- In open letters to Spanish newspapers and at a massive demonstration in downtown Madrid, Garzón decried the war as illegal, unnecessary, and almost certainly counterproductive in the pursuit of a more pro-Western Middle East.
- On 10 August 1548, the contest which all Italy wanted to see, for the correspondence between the two antagonists had taken the form of open letters, took place in the Church in the Garden of the Frati Zoccolanti in Milan.
- Perhaps the half-forgotten genre of open letters written by notable intellectuals and artists in support of the government's policies was revived in part to help the authorities find suitable Public Chamber candidates.
- This week she wrote an open letter to our school newspaper asking whether they should still let Adam play on our baseball team.
- My frequent open letters to the Okeford Gazette have likewise come to no avail.
- It's an open letter to condescending reviewers of comics and mentions your name a couple of times.
|