释义 |
proletariatpro‧le‧tar‧i‧at /ˌprəʊləˈteəriət $ ˌproʊləˈter-/ noun proletariatOrigin: 1800-1900 French prolétariat, from Latin proletarius; ➔ PROLETARIAN - Engels was to remark that since property was not a consideration, only the proletariat could marry for love.
- Even though the real wages and living standards of the proletariat may rise, its members will become poorer in relation to the bourgeoisie.
- For Lukács it was the proletariat who were to achieve this praxis.
- Secondly, the difference in wealth between the bourgeoisie and the proletariat will increase as the accumulation of capital proceeds.
- Since they are non-producers, the bourgeoisie are therefore exploiting the proletariat, the real producers of wealth.
- The proletariat was hardly more impressed by the Manifesto.
- The proletariat, in contrast, own no means of production whatever.
- This proletariat interests neither the opposition forces nor the regimes based on the sacred.
ADJECTIVE► industrial· Metal castings were exported all over the world and an industrial proletariat developed very early.· The state-sponsored agro-industrial cooperatives are the focal point for this discussion of the creation of an industrial proletariat.· The role of the peasantry in the revolution or its relationship with the industrial proletariat was never satisfactorily defined by the Comintern.· I have listed these processes because it was through their operation that Tyneside's industrial proletariat was created.· It was dominated from the start by Marxism, proclaiming the industrial proletariat as saviours of the human race. the proletariat [+ singular or plural verb] the class of workers who own no property and work for wages, especially in factories, building things etc – used in socialist writings—proletarian adjective—proletarian noun [countable] |