释义 |
Definition of bicultural in English: biculturaladjective bʌɪˈkʌltʃ(ə)r(ə)lˌbīˈkəlCH(ə)rəl Having or combining the cultural attitudes and customs of two nations, peoples, or ethnic groups. 二元文化的,两种民族文化结合的 there is too little recognition of the children's bilingual and bicultural status Example sentencesExamples - All of this to say that no matter how much I might think or want to believe that I live in a bicultural world, I really don't.
- The book contributes to bicultural understanding by exploring the perceptual and semantic mechanisms at work in the French and English languages as they collide in the task of translation.
- With many more immigrants entering the country we are moving from a bicultural to a multicultural society.
- I am Irish and I am African-American and I am the first bicultural contestant.
- They questioned the traditional practices and philosophies of the school and were determined to provide their children with a bilingual / bicultural environment in the home and school.
- This interaction involved two persons with bicultural personalities at different stages of their cultural/identity development.
- In the final analysis, upon developing a bicultural personality, they operate with and beyond cultural meanings with a sense of being worthwhile.
- Jo attended the group herself and reported on the involvement of the members in the core groups and the bicultural focus of the organisation.
- Bilingual / bicultural children face daunting challenges in educational settings that not only disregard their home language and culture, but also the wisdom of previous generations.
- Thus, Hispanic children can be exposed to a monolingual English environment at home, but still develop a bicultural identity that allows them to adapt to social environments with diverse value systems.
- In most cases, the clear preference is for bilingual, bicultural therapists, but when a Spanish-speaking therapist is not available, it may be necessary to use an interpreter.
- English-speaking students should find a bilingual / bicultural setting particularly enriching both academically and personally.
- So what constitutes being bicultural in the Japanese and Australian contexts - well for a start, our family believes it is lot more than simply getting our kids to speak, read and write both languages.
- And, as with other bicultural families, the therapeutic work includes both accepting differences among members and recognizing similarities.
- In a bicultural setting the challenge exists to incorporate cultural content into cognitive-behavioural practice.
- There is general agreement that being bilingual and bicultural are positive attributes in an increasingly culturally diverse country.
- The only long-term future for a bicultural nation is to develop models of co-management.
- We have developed positive attitudes and built bicultural institutions that are the envy of the world.
- But we have some way to travel before we can become a bicultural, bi-structural nation.
- She had grown up both bilingual and bicultural, speaking Maidu with her mother and English with her father, a Dutch settler who had come Wisconsin by covered wagon as a child.
Derivativesnoun Hence, the results revealed that students who had a greater awareness for, and interest in developing biculturalism had superior grade point average than their counterparts who had less interest in their heritage. Example sentencesExamples - Through play and experimentation, children's texts foreground the possibilities of linguistic hybridity, bilingualism, and biculturalism.
- Throughout the eight learning communities, the authors found a school-wide focus on facilitating individual student success by building on students' bilingualism and biculturalism.
- Societal and school supports are essential for bilingualism and biculturalism.
- They are learning about tolerance, about biculturalism and multiculturalism, about how to train for jobs, about how to broaden their minds, and about how make worthwhile interjections that are intelligible.
Definition of bicultural in US English: biculturaladjectiveˌbīˈkəlCH(ə)rəl Having or combining the cultural attitudes and customs of two nations, peoples, or ethnic groups. 二元文化的,两种民族文化结合的 there is too little recognition of the children's bilingual and bicultural status Example sentencesExamples - But we have some way to travel before we can become a bicultural, bi-structural nation.
- We have developed positive attitudes and built bicultural institutions that are the envy of the world.
- Jo attended the group herself and reported on the involvement of the members in the core groups and the bicultural focus of the organisation.
- In the final analysis, upon developing a bicultural personality, they operate with and beyond cultural meanings with a sense of being worthwhile.
- She had grown up both bilingual and bicultural, speaking Maidu with her mother and English with her father, a Dutch settler who had come Wisconsin by covered wagon as a child.
- There is general agreement that being bilingual and bicultural are positive attributes in an increasingly culturally diverse country.
- Bilingual / bicultural children face daunting challenges in educational settings that not only disregard their home language and culture, but also the wisdom of previous generations.
- So what constitutes being bicultural in the Japanese and Australian contexts - well for a start, our family believes it is lot more than simply getting our kids to speak, read and write both languages.
- The book contributes to bicultural understanding by exploring the perceptual and semantic mechanisms at work in the French and English languages as they collide in the task of translation.
- And, as with other bicultural families, the therapeutic work includes both accepting differences among members and recognizing similarities.
- I am Irish and I am African-American and I am the first bicultural contestant.
- The only long-term future for a bicultural nation is to develop models of co-management.
- In most cases, the clear preference is for bilingual, bicultural therapists, but when a Spanish-speaking therapist is not available, it may be necessary to use an interpreter.
- All of this to say that no matter how much I might think or want to believe that I live in a bicultural world, I really don't.
- Thus, Hispanic children can be exposed to a monolingual English environment at home, but still develop a bicultural identity that allows them to adapt to social environments with diverse value systems.
- English-speaking students should find a bilingual / bicultural setting particularly enriching both academically and personally.
- This interaction involved two persons with bicultural personalities at different stages of their cultural/identity development.
- With many more immigrants entering the country we are moving from a bicultural to a multicultural society.
- In a bicultural setting the challenge exists to incorporate cultural content into cognitive-behavioural practice.
- They questioned the traditional practices and philosophies of the school and were determined to provide their children with a bilingual / bicultural environment in the home and school.
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