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词汇 transnational
释义

Definition of transnational in English:

transnational

adjectivetranzˈnaʃ(ə)n(ə)ltransˈnaʃ(ə)n(ə)ltrɑːnsˈnaʃ(ə)n(ə)ltrɑːnzˈnaʃ(ə)n(ə)l
  • Extending or operating across national boundaries.

    超越国界的,跨国的

    transnational advertising agencies

    跨国广告公司。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • What types of transnational actors can be based on national groups?
    • This is nation states versus transnational terrorist organizations.
    • The bureaucratic boundaries of the nation-state complicate intimate transnational exchange.
    • Extradition, as a tool to combat transnational crime, particularly terrorism, is always a controversial issue.
    • Among them are those who are effectively stateless, owing allegiance only to the extremist cause of transnational terrorism.
    • The fibre supply was now tightly committed to the operations of three large transnational pulp and paper corporations.
    • As we will see, this changing identity has both national and transnational dimensions.
    • Both inwardly and outwardly, growing instability infected national and transnational politics.
    • Some adjustment will be required, as prior rules and procedures are adapted to a new kind of transnational conflict.
    • It's about upholding national sovereignty in the face of fancy, transnational treaties, like the Human Rights Act.
    • Plainly, the US dominates these institutions, as it dominates other transnational bodies.
    • The main drivers of change are now transnational corporations rather than national governments.
    • The maquiladora sector is governed by a slew of local, national and transnational laws.
    • Of course, it is true that it is difficult for one nation to solve a transnational problem.
    • It negated such emotive factors as transnational religious feeling.
    • Pluralists consider non-state actors very important entities, having transnational impact.
    • First, the organization operates at a transnational level from London.
    • This is a world of interdependence, in which nation-states are subordinated to transnational authorities.
    • A spokesman for the Department of Justice said the convention was an important instrument in combating transnational crime.
    • In the current national military strategy, transnational threats are of prime importance.
nountranzˈnaʃ(ə)n(ə)ltransˈnaʃ(ə)n(ə)ltrɑːnsˈnaʃ(ə)n(ə)ltrɑːnzˈnaʃ(ə)n(ə)l
  • A multinational company.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • For all those who believe that it is impossible to live without the products of transnationals, this film will serve as a challenge.
    • Imported milk is dumped in Ecuador for half of what it costs to produce it, but transnationals sell it back to us at US $1.80 per litre.
    • I still want to know how transnationals can be trusted.
    • These states, most notably those that host the major tobacco transnationals, seem happy to stand by as their companies peddle death elsewhere.
    • Critics of the deal charge that it will yield super-profits for energy transnationals and enrich a small group of local businessmen, while robbing Bolivia of its most valuable natural resource.
    • Just a handful of transnationals, local corporations and narrow sections of educated middle-class employees.
    • It aims to secure the interests of American-controlled transnationals before rival powers are sufficiently strong to challenge the US.
    • The response of all the transnationals is one of mergers, corporate restructuring and downsizing, resulting in the loss of tens of thousands of jobs worldwide.
    • Should we know if the people advising government to liquidate our public assets also work as agents for foreign transnationals?
    • The transnationals can't be bothered supplying such a poor market.
    • Foreign companies have been welcomed, and privatized farms are ditching Soviet-era cotton production for lucrative tobacco contracts with transnationals.
    • Chinese subsidiaries of major transnationals will also be able to compete directly against local producers in such areas as banking, insurance, telecommunications and petrochemical industries.
    • Along with other foreign transnationals they had won lucrative contracts to build new coal-fired power plants in energy-hungry Thailand.
    • The transnationals know that their activities are safe from public scrutiny and legal challenge.
    • In spite of the complexities of spanning the globe and a sluggish economic environment, most of these tech transnationals have been delivering outstanding financial results.
    • In the past, unemployed workers have pressured oil transnationals to lower the price of propane for the unemployed.
    • For the tech industry's transnationals, the biggest challenges lie in bridging the gaps created by time, space, and cultures.
    • It goes beyond the CEOs of big transnationals in manufacturing, services and finance.
    • A graphic example of how the profit hierarchy is dominated by major transnationals is the production of personal computers, China's second largest export item after garments.
    • Across Australia, tens of thousands of smaller farmers have been driven off the land over the past two decades, their properties absorbed by agricultural transnationals and wealthier farmers.

Derivatives

  • transnationalism

  • noun
    • Some theories of transnationalism are extremely immaterial.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • How might the competing forces of transnationalism and movement be squared with the necessity for reasonable levels of access to services and institutions?
      • But my research, and that of others, suggests that the traditional model that informs immigration policy can't deal with transnationalism.
      • But during the millennium and start of the 21st century, demonstrations against globalism have been on the rise, responding to rapid developments in transnationalism.
      • The third generation of liberal institutional scholarship was the transnationalism and complex interdependence of the 1970s.
  • transnationally

  • adverb
    • Founded as New Amsterdam in 1626, New York has long been the most visible site of the struggle over American identity as it has been domestically and transnationally constructed.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • By making it easier to offer courses transnationally, exporters can use the excess educational capacity of the North to increase capacity in the South.
      • Advanced telecommunications technologies are disseminating ideas, values, and styles of behaviour transnationally at an unprecedented rate.
      • A more recent trend is the incorporation of a new type of Irish emigrant - the transnationally mobile educated elite - into primary sector positions in ‘global’ cities.
      • They occur all over the world and the activities are carried out transnationally.

Definition of transnational in US English:

transnational

adjective
  • Extending or operating across national boundaries.

    超越国界的,跨国的

    transnational advertising agencies

    跨国广告公司。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Plainly, the US dominates these institutions, as it dominates other transnational bodies.
    • Among them are those who are effectively stateless, owing allegiance only to the extremist cause of transnational terrorism.
    • This is a world of interdependence, in which nation-states are subordinated to transnational authorities.
    • Pluralists consider non-state actors very important entities, having transnational impact.
    • In the current national military strategy, transnational threats are of prime importance.
    • First, the organization operates at a transnational level from London.
    • Both inwardly and outwardly, growing instability infected national and transnational politics.
    • It negated such emotive factors as transnational religious feeling.
    • Extradition, as a tool to combat transnational crime, particularly terrorism, is always a controversial issue.
    • The maquiladora sector is governed by a slew of local, national and transnational laws.
    • Some adjustment will be required, as prior rules and procedures are adapted to a new kind of transnational conflict.
    • What types of transnational actors can be based on national groups?
    • This is nation states versus transnational terrorist organizations.
    • Of course, it is true that it is difficult for one nation to solve a transnational problem.
    • The bureaucratic boundaries of the nation-state complicate intimate transnational exchange.
    • The fibre supply was now tightly committed to the operations of three large transnational pulp and paper corporations.
    • It's about upholding national sovereignty in the face of fancy, transnational treaties, like the Human Rights Act.
    • The main drivers of change are now transnational corporations rather than national governments.
    • As we will see, this changing identity has both national and transnational dimensions.
    • A spokesman for the Department of Justice said the convention was an important instrument in combating transnational crime.
noun
  • A large company operating internationally; a multinational.

    跨国公司

    Example sentencesExamples
    • For the tech industry's transnationals, the biggest challenges lie in bridging the gaps created by time, space, and cultures.
    • Should we know if the people advising government to liquidate our public assets also work as agents for foreign transnationals?
    • In the past, unemployed workers have pressured oil transnationals to lower the price of propane for the unemployed.
    • Across Australia, tens of thousands of smaller farmers have been driven off the land over the past two decades, their properties absorbed by agricultural transnationals and wealthier farmers.
    • It aims to secure the interests of American-controlled transnationals before rival powers are sufficiently strong to challenge the US.
    • Foreign companies have been welcomed, and privatized farms are ditching Soviet-era cotton production for lucrative tobacco contracts with transnationals.
    • The transnationals can't be bothered supplying such a poor market.
    • In spite of the complexities of spanning the globe and a sluggish economic environment, most of these tech transnationals have been delivering outstanding financial results.
    • I still want to know how transnationals can be trusted.
    • Chinese subsidiaries of major transnationals will also be able to compete directly against local producers in such areas as banking, insurance, telecommunications and petrochemical industries.
    • The transnationals know that their activities are safe from public scrutiny and legal challenge.
    • The response of all the transnationals is one of mergers, corporate restructuring and downsizing, resulting in the loss of tens of thousands of jobs worldwide.
    • Critics of the deal charge that it will yield super-profits for energy transnationals and enrich a small group of local businessmen, while robbing Bolivia of its most valuable natural resource.
    • It goes beyond the CEOs of big transnationals in manufacturing, services and finance.
    • For all those who believe that it is impossible to live without the products of transnationals, this film will serve as a challenge.
    • Along with other foreign transnationals they had won lucrative contracts to build new coal-fired power plants in energy-hungry Thailand.
    • Imported milk is dumped in Ecuador for half of what it costs to produce it, but transnationals sell it back to us at US $1.80 per litre.
    • These states, most notably those that host the major tobacco transnationals, seem happy to stand by as their companies peddle death elsewhere.
    • A graphic example of how the profit hierarchy is dominated by major transnationals is the production of personal computers, China's second largest export item after garments.
    • Just a handful of transnationals, local corporations and narrow sections of educated middle-class employees.
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