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词汇 contrarian
释义

Definition of contrarian in English:

contrarian

noun kənˈtrɛːrɪənkənˈtrɛ(ə)riən
  • A person who opposes or rejects popular opinion, especially in stock exchange dealing.

    (尤指股票交易中的)逆向思维者,反普遍看法者,反主流看法者;反其道而行者

    it has become fashionable to be a stock-market contrarian
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Since then, bear market losses and dashed hopes have taught them to be more skeptical - which to bullish contrarians just makes this rally all the more credible.
    • ‘From an intellectual point of view, these contrarians are pathetic, because there's no scientific validity to their arguments whatsoever,’ Mann says.
    • These types of investors are also called contrarians since they are going against the common market sentiment at the time.
    • For contrarians then, the UK market is perhaps as good a bet as any for recovery.
    • They always take the side of the social critics, the underdogs, the people who tend to make music, the contrarians of society.
    • However, while the term ‘space tourism’ has gained wide acceptance, there are some contrarians out there who don't see ‘tourism’ as the best word to describe spaceflight for a broader segment of the public.
    • The writer who has most often and most powerfully made the arguments within the establishment but against its preoccupations is Christopher Hitchens, a man who adores contrarians throughout history.
    • Revolutions throughout history have always been initiated by a small minority of highly dedicated contrarians.
    • Of course, there would be the odd contrarians who would refuse to ‘go’, but their short lives would become even more miserable as society collapsed from the exodus.
    • Journalists fancy themselves to be skeptics and contrarians.
    • Sometimes the insane and the contrarians and the ones who are closest to suicide are the most valuable people society has.
    • Overly bullish sentiment or complacency is regarded as bearish by contrarians.
    • Neglecting the significance of the large regional differences in past temperature changes is another classic pitfall in the arguments put forward by many climate change contrarians.
    • And if they are going to be packaged and marketed as journalists, contrarians should be held to the same standards as any other journalists.
    • Market contrarians know that traditionally, these kinds of occurrences are the usual hallmarks of a major top in the oil market.
    • Not much has changed, except to say the industry is at a low point and therefore attractive to contrarians.
    • The trick is finding those peaks, and contrarians have a number of ways of uncovering them.
    • Net interest cover should be of particular interest to contrarians, as sizeable debts are very often why many shares seem cheap.
    • This guarantees that, except for rare contrarians like Ron Paul, all politicians that come before the voters every election year are going to be pushing more and more programs and handouts.
    • With that in mind, I generally spend a whole lot of my time perusing news sources frequented by contrarians.
adjective kənˈtrɛːrɪənkənˈtrɛ(ə)riən
  • Opposing or rejecting popular opinion or current practice.

    违反民意的;违反惯例的;反抗世俗的

    the comment came more from a contrarian disposition than moral conviction

    这种批评更大程度上是出于愤世嫉俗的本性,而非道德信念。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Do you have that one last remaining late-adopter contrarian friend who still refuses to have any sort of web presence?
    • However, some contrarian investors think the FTSE 100 could take the lead this year because it looks cheap compared with the FTSE 250.
    • Here's a little bit of contrarian thinking: why try to prevent vote fraud at all?
    • Investors who look to take the opposing stance to the majority are known as contrarians and next week I'll be setting out the rules of contrarian trading: how to buy and sell when others won't.
    • Although Rogers' observations on contrarian markets were written in 1998, he offered some advice that will sound familiar to those whose fingers were burnt in the stock market a few years later.
    • This wasn't the day for deeply contrarian rhetoric.
    • We've always valued such marginalization because it leads to contrarian positions - at their best, they lead to theories more original, perspectives more perceptive.
    • I have to tell you that Mike's contrarian intellectualizing on the subject of reporters and the law was more amusing when it was all hypothetical.
    • But that would be far too much to expect, so they have re-invented themselves as contrarian pro-marketeers who lecture the rest of us on how markets should work properly.
    • And in the absence of contrarian perspectives, the faith tends to become inbred and stagnant.
    • Being contrarian is apparently OK as long as in being contrarian you agree with us.
    • At the same time as he developed this contrarian personality to society he still secretly yearned for an audience.
    • Publishing and responding to criticism invariably triggers contrarian pieces from readers, rebalancing debate as if by magic!
    • The charming yet contrarian British bad boy slammed the march as a waste of time.
    • Bloggers, who post daily journals consisting mostly of links to and brief commentaries on TV and newspaper coverage, tend to carry contrarian viewpoints.
    • Yet, it points to a tendency - I'll put it as weakly as that - toward re-marketing tired conservative shibboleths as funky new contrarian understandings.
    • Savers who want to swim against the tide can simply buy funds that pick up on contrarian trends.
    • Over the decades, he has moved between representation and abstraction, following his own independent and often contrarian path.
    • This new column serves to give readers refreshing, often contrarian views on key industry issues.
    • Many of the Deanies I spoke to in Iowa referred to his candor and contrarian stances in terms that would be familiar to Minnesotans who felt similar ties to Paul Wellstone or Jesse Ventura.

Derivatives

  • contrarianism

  • noun
    • This is all a bit strange because Lévy is known in France for his contrarianism.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • In this alone it stands as a triumph of contrarianism.
      • A streak of dour contrarianism is evident in Mr. Jackson's alternative view of economics, which, though seemingly well-developed, rejects as ‘bilge’ elementary definitions that the corporate world takes for granted.
      • Many who consider themselves feminists in the analytic tradition hold that there are no doctrines required of analytical feminists; indeed, there is even a spirit of contrarianism about such matters.
      • Mostly I just find him intermittently annoying because I doubt that his studiously developed online contrarianism reflects who he really is.

Rhymes

agrarian, antiquarian, apiarian, Aquarian, Arian, Aryan, authoritarian, barbarian, Bavarian, Bulgarian, Caesarean (US Cesarean), centenarian, communitarian, Darien, disciplinarian, egalitarian, equalitarian, establishmentarian, fruitarian, Gibraltarian, grammarian, Hanoverian, humanitarian, Hungarian, latitudinarian, libertarian, librarian, majoritarian, millenarian, necessarian, necessitarian, nonagenarian, octogenarian, ovarian, Parian, parliamentarian, planarian, predestinarian, prelapsarian, proletarian, quadragenarian, quinquagenarian, quodlibetarian, Rastafarian, riparian, rosarian, Rotarian, sabbatarian, Sagittarian, sanitarian, Sauveterrian, sectarian, seminarian, septuagenarian, sexagenarian, topiarian, totalitarian, Trinitarian, ubiquitarian, Unitarian, utilitarian, valetudinarian, vegetarian, veterinarian, vulgarian

Definition of contrarian in US English:

contrarian

nounkənˈtre(ə)rēənkənˈtrɛ(ə)riən
  • A person who opposes or rejects popular opinion, especially in stock exchange dealing.

    (尤指股票交易中的)逆向思维者,反普遍看法者,反主流看法者;反其道而行者

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Overly bullish sentiment or complacency is regarded as bearish by contrarians.
    • Since then, bear market losses and dashed hopes have taught them to be more skeptical - which to bullish contrarians just makes this rally all the more credible.
    • Not much has changed, except to say the industry is at a low point and therefore attractive to contrarians.
    • Sometimes the insane and the contrarians and the ones who are closest to suicide are the most valuable people society has.
    • Journalists fancy themselves to be skeptics and contrarians.
    • The writer who has most often and most powerfully made the arguments within the establishment but against its preoccupations is Christopher Hitchens, a man who adores contrarians throughout history.
    • For contrarians then, the UK market is perhaps as good a bet as any for recovery.
    • Of course, there would be the odd contrarians who would refuse to ‘go’, but their short lives would become even more miserable as society collapsed from the exodus.
    • Revolutions throughout history have always been initiated by a small minority of highly dedicated contrarians.
    • This guarantees that, except for rare contrarians like Ron Paul, all politicians that come before the voters every election year are going to be pushing more and more programs and handouts.
    • They always take the side of the social critics, the underdogs, the people who tend to make music, the contrarians of society.
    • Neglecting the significance of the large regional differences in past temperature changes is another classic pitfall in the arguments put forward by many climate change contrarians.
    • These types of investors are also called contrarians since they are going against the common market sentiment at the time.
    • However, while the term ‘space tourism’ has gained wide acceptance, there are some contrarians out there who don't see ‘tourism’ as the best word to describe spaceflight for a broader segment of the public.
    • The trick is finding those peaks, and contrarians have a number of ways of uncovering them.
    • ‘From an intellectual point of view, these contrarians are pathetic, because there's no scientific validity to their arguments whatsoever,’ Mann says.
    • Net interest cover should be of particular interest to contrarians, as sizeable debts are very often why many shares seem cheap.
    • With that in mind, I generally spend a whole lot of my time perusing news sources frequented by contrarians.
    • Market contrarians know that traditionally, these kinds of occurrences are the usual hallmarks of a major top in the oil market.
    • And if they are going to be packaged and marketed as journalists, contrarians should be held to the same standards as any other journalists.
adjectivekənˈtre(ə)rēənkənˈtrɛ(ə)riən
  • Opposing or rejecting popular opinion; going against current practice.

    违反民意的;违反惯例的;反抗世俗的

    the comment came more from a contrarian disposition than moral conviction

    这种批评更大程度上是出于愤世嫉俗的本性,而非道德信念。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • This new column serves to give readers refreshing, often contrarian views on key industry issues.
    • However, some contrarian investors think the FTSE 100 could take the lead this year because it looks cheap compared with the FTSE 250.
    • At the same time as he developed this contrarian personality to society he still secretly yearned for an audience.
    • Publishing and responding to criticism invariably triggers contrarian pieces from readers, rebalancing debate as if by magic!
    • Here's a little bit of contrarian thinking: why try to prevent vote fraud at all?
    • The charming yet contrarian British bad boy slammed the march as a waste of time.
    • Investors who look to take the opposing stance to the majority are known as contrarians and next week I'll be setting out the rules of contrarian trading: how to buy and sell when others won't.
    • Although Rogers' observations on contrarian markets were written in 1998, he offered some advice that will sound familiar to those whose fingers were burnt in the stock market a few years later.
    • We've always valued such marginalization because it leads to contrarian positions - at their best, they lead to theories more original, perspectives more perceptive.
    • Yet, it points to a tendency - I'll put it as weakly as that - toward re-marketing tired conservative shibboleths as funky new contrarian understandings.
    • Over the decades, he has moved between representation and abstraction, following his own independent and often contrarian path.
    • But that would be far too much to expect, so they have re-invented themselves as contrarian pro-marketeers who lecture the rest of us on how markets should work properly.
    • Being contrarian is apparently OK as long as in being contrarian you agree with us.
    • Bloggers, who post daily journals consisting mostly of links to and brief commentaries on TV and newspaper coverage, tend to carry contrarian viewpoints.
    • I have to tell you that Mike's contrarian intellectualizing on the subject of reporters and the law was more amusing when it was all hypothetical.
    • This wasn't the day for deeply contrarian rhetoric.
    • Many of the Deanies I spoke to in Iowa referred to his candor and contrarian stances in terms that would be familiar to Minnesotans who felt similar ties to Paul Wellstone or Jesse Ventura.
    • Savers who want to swim against the tide can simply buy funds that pick up on contrarian trends.
    • And in the absence of contrarian perspectives, the faith tends to become inbred and stagnant.
    • Do you have that one last remaining late-adopter contrarian friend who still refuses to have any sort of web presence?
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