释义 |
Definition of trial balloon in English: trial balloonnoun A tentative measure taken or statement made to see how a new policy will be received. 试行方案,试探性的言语 different members of the cabinet are sending up one trial balloon after another Example sentencesExamples - It is not inconceivable that their op-ed is a trial balloon in the foreign-affairs bureaucracy's effort to make its case against proponents of radical change.
- Several have told me not to buy into the Miers trial balloon.
- I suspect this report is a trial balloon, to see what the domestic and international reaction would be.
- Although there had been some speculation Pryor could be the trial balloon for the extreme parliamentary move, it now appears several others could head to the floor before him.
- ‘It's a new concept and we're just putting out a trial balloon,’ LeRoux said.
- Buried inside the ‘Economic Report of the President’ was a trial balloon for an approach that would fix the problem of the lower manufacturing jobs numbers.
- If this was, as some have suggested, a trial balloon being floated by the administration to see how it plays with the public, it is vital that we shoot it out of the sky with all due haste.
- But for now, he's merely the living trial balloon.
- And it may be more of a trial balloon for forcing a coup than anything else, which would be good.
- This trial balloon came on top of an article in which the US Federal Reserve pondered the use of ‘unconventional’ measures, including the purchase of equities, to boost the economy.
- From time to time, however, the ‘orthodox school’ of historians and academics, as Windschuttle calls his adversaries, float a trial balloon to test a different approach.
- In other words, the panel will have some success, for example, in serving as a trial balloon for economic policies and in cultivating a new generation of economic and financial officials.
- Some administration and congressional advisors said they believed the idea had been floated as a trial balloon to see how much support or opposition it attracted.
- And I can see a situation where that might apply, but what I'm saying is, what I think has happened is that the administration has run out a trial balloon.
- I know, the author's intention is to provoke strong reaction but there's more to it, and it sounds too much like a trial balloon to me.
- With more than six million acres of forest lost to fire last summer, it might not hurt to send up a trial balloon.
- If it was just a trial balloon, it should be popped.
- The Chinese government doesn't have accidents like this; it was clearly a trial balloon to see how markets would take the news.
Synonyms tentative enquiry, tentative proposal, tentative suggestion
Origin1930s: from translation of French ballon d'essai. Definition of trial balloon in US English: trial balloonnounˈtraɪ(ə)l bəˈlunˈtrī(ə)l bəˈlo͞on A tentative measure taken or statement made to see how a new policy will be received. 试行方案,试探性的言语 different members of the cabinet are sending up one trial balloon after another Example sentencesExamples - I know, the author's intention is to provoke strong reaction but there's more to it, and it sounds too much like a trial balloon to me.
- This trial balloon came on top of an article in which the US Federal Reserve pondered the use of ‘unconventional’ measures, including the purchase of equities, to boost the economy.
- Although there had been some speculation Pryor could be the trial balloon for the extreme parliamentary move, it now appears several others could head to the floor before him.
- And I can see a situation where that might apply, but what I'm saying is, what I think has happened is that the administration has run out a trial balloon.
- And it may be more of a trial balloon for forcing a coup than anything else, which would be good.
- If this was, as some have suggested, a trial balloon being floated by the administration to see how it plays with the public, it is vital that we shoot it out of the sky with all due haste.
- I suspect this report is a trial balloon, to see what the domestic and international reaction would be.
- Several have told me not to buy into the Miers trial balloon.
- In other words, the panel will have some success, for example, in serving as a trial balloon for economic policies and in cultivating a new generation of economic and financial officials.
- It is not inconceivable that their op-ed is a trial balloon in the foreign-affairs bureaucracy's effort to make its case against proponents of radical change.
- Some administration and congressional advisors said they believed the idea had been floated as a trial balloon to see how much support or opposition it attracted.
- Buried inside the ‘Economic Report of the President’ was a trial balloon for an approach that would fix the problem of the lower manufacturing jobs numbers.
- If it was just a trial balloon, it should be popped.
- But for now, he's merely the living trial balloon.
- From time to time, however, the ‘orthodox school’ of historians and academics, as Windschuttle calls his adversaries, float a trial balloon to test a different approach.
- ‘It's a new concept and we're just putting out a trial balloon,’ LeRoux said.
- The Chinese government doesn't have accidents like this; it was clearly a trial balloon to see how markets would take the news.
- With more than six million acres of forest lost to fire last summer, it might not hurt to send up a trial balloon.
Synonyms tentative enquiry, tentative proposal, tentative suggestion
Origin1930s: from translation of French ballon d'essai. |