释义 |
Definition of brains trust in English: brains trustnoun 1British A group of experts who give impromptu answers to questions in front of an audience or on the radio. 〈英〉(在公共集会、广播或电视节目中即席回答问题的)专家小组 Example sentencesExamples - The key to the program's uniqueness is the use of a Brains Trust, a panel of three "experts", usually celebrities, who compete alongside the contestants.
- On January 4th 1943 the BBC put its Brains Trust into reverse.
- It's great being able to post tricky requests for information to the listserv or collective brains trust.
2North American A group of experts appointed to advise a government or politician. Example sentencesExamples - A Pentagon official said: ‘The one thing that survived the Gulf War and sanctions was Iraq's brains trust.’
- The fight - as close, in many districts, as the presidential race is expected to be - is already getting nasty, and news items like this one, for example, and this one, ought to give pause to the GOP brain trust.
- Was it difficult to work this out with the Gore brain trust?
- Gore's campaign, powered by a brain trust of highly paid veteran advisers known for tough political instincts, has settled on a multi-pronged strategy.
- It used to be the seniors who were the brain trust - back in Korea and to some extent in Vietnam, ordinary troops and junior officers were sometimes just completely out of their depth.
- The UN inspectors had dismantled the facilities and weapons materials, but what remained was the brain trust of scientists and the engineering know-how.
- One, however, feels that the combined brain trust that we have at present heading our Government has the best chance of finding workable solutions to take our economy forward.
- He helped run that one as a regular attendee at the morning meetings in the Executive Building of the brains trust that put together the mother of all campaign disasters.
- Proof is in a high-powered brain trust, the Global Council of CSOs, led by one-time White House adviser Howard Schmidt.
- I think it's ridiculous to suggest that ‘Commander in Chief’ is the product of some sort of conspiracy cooked up in the upper reaches of the Clinton brain trust.
- The International Forum on Globalization - the brain trust of the North American side of the movement - lacks transparency in its decision-making and isn't accountable to a broad membership.
- A president can always recruit experienced advisors and a brain trust, but it is much more difficult to think that someone who is regarded as untrustworthy will reform after election day.
- The details of which I have some knowledge, such as the Saturday meeting between Mondale and his brain trust in which the decision to run was made, are right.
- Instead, leaving it to the electoral brains trust of Carr, Egan, Roozendaal and Sartor have probably brought about their worst nightmare for the Sydney City - a Clover Moore-Greens majority on the Council.
- Some economists are wondering if a larger transformation is at work - accelerating a trend in which the region's big employers keep a brain trust of creative people and engineers here but hire workers for lower-level tasks elsewhere.
- Their collective brain trust will be denied to the FDA who will then have to rely on the next lower level of expertise for guidance.
- To head this brains trust Groves had selected America's most outstanding physicist, the 39-year-old Dr Julius Robert Oppenheimer.
- Indeed, most Democratic elected officials have been running recently on warmed-up leftovers from the Clinton brain trust, ideas which were once innovative but are now far from fresh.
- If the left brain trust is telling us to fear for our lives, why is the right brain trust telegraphing the president's schedule to the world?
- As a result, many chief executives lack the informal brain trust of fellow business school graduates that Americans can usually turn to for advice.
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