释义 |
bourgeoisiebour‧geoi‧sie /ˌbʊəʒwɑːˈziː $ ˌbʊr-/ noun bourgeoisieOrigin: 1700-1800 French bourgeois; ➔ BOURGEOIS - A Marxist writer would probably identify this group as the first stirrings of a black petit bourgeoisie.
- Even though the real wages and living standards of the proletariat may rise, its members will become poorer in relation to the bourgeoisie.
- Secondly, the difference in wealth between the bourgeoisie and the proletariat will increase as the accumulation of capital proceeds.
- Similarly, the silk-wearing bourgeoisie of Granada contrasted with the poor, cotton-clad peasants from the mountains nearby.
- The bourgeoisie class own the means of production, the proletariat do not.
- The class enemy, the bourgeoisie and its allies, wielded a vast array of ideological weapons designed to mislead the proletariat.
- The task, in short, was to use bourgeois culture against the bourgeoisie.
- The Yugoslavs sought a close, opportunistic alliance with the national bourgeoisie of the colonial and semicolonial countries.
the middle class► middle-class belonging to the class of people who are usually well educated, fairly rich, and who work in jobs which they have trained to do. For example, doctors, lawyers, and managers are middle-class: · The newspaper's readers are mostly middle class.· They live in a middle-class neighbourhood on the edge of town. ► bourgeois typical of richer middle-class people and their attitudes or way of life, especially their concern with money, property, and correct social behaviour: · She rejected her parents' conventional bourgeois lifestyle.· They never married because they believed that marriage was a bourgeois institution. ► the bourgeoisie the class that owns most of the wealth, property, and industry - use this especially when you are talking about politics or history: · The poor viewed with envy the increasing wealth of the bourgeoisie.· A revolution would be a threat to the nation's bourgeoisie. ► white-collar: white-collar worker/job/employee someone who works in an office, not a factory, mine etc: · The economic recession has put many white-collar workers in danger of losing their jobs. ADJECTIVE► industrial· For although the great mass of its membership was working class, it also embraced an increasing section of the industrial bourgeoisie.· Within the Alliance interests of local petit bourgeoisie and industrial bourgeoisie converged. ► local· Within the Alliance interests of local petit bourgeoisie and industrial bourgeoisie converged. ► national· They initially thought that competition from powerful foreign interests would encourage the national bourgeoisie to take an anti-imperialist stand.· The Yugoslavs sought a close, opportunistic alliance with the national bourgeoisie of the colonial and semicolonial countries.· What it would put a stop to is the reactionary policy of subordinating the revolutionary vanguard to the national bourgeoisie. ► new· Far more important, however, has been the merging of the new bourgeoisie with the traditional aristocracy.· For it is as a member, and a recorder, of the new bourgeoisie that Boilly most deserves our attention. ► petty· An alliance between workers, peasants and petty bourgeoisie necessitates a bureaucratic authoritarian regime. 2.· I had better go now and pay my respects to the petty bourgeoisie.· Apart from farmers, even the old petty bourgeoisie have grown or remained stable as a proportion of the labour force. ► the bourgeoisie- A revolution would be a threat to the nation's bourgeoisie.
- The poor viewed with envy the increasing wealth of the bourgeoisie.
the bourgeoisie the people in a society who are rich, educated, own land etc, according to Marxism → the proletariat |