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单词 naturalization
释义

Definition of naturalization in English:

naturalization

(British naturalisation)
noun natʃ(ə)rəlʌɪˈzeɪʃ(ə)n
mass noun
  • 1The admittance of a foreigner to the citizenship of a country.

    an application for naturalization as a British citizen
    as modifier the naturalization process can be intimidating
    Example sentencesExamples
    • As naturalization rates increased, Sicilian Americans began to switch from radical union activity to formal politics.
    • An application was made to the Home Secretary who could grant naturalisation.
    • Those eligible for naturalisation should be granted citizenship.
    • In most cases, aspiring voters would have to produce an original birth certificate, naturalization papers or a passport.
    • Since 1795 Congress had preserved the naturalization of aliens as an exclusively federal domain, leaving the states with no power to create United States citizens.
    • The agency received nearly 2.5 million naturalization petitions and visa applications in July and August.
    • He signed the certificates of naturalisation for the 11 people.
    • Latvia finalized a citizenship and naturalization law in summer 1994.
    • He has come to America to stay and is eager to complete the naturalization process as soon as possible.
    • He had applied for naturalisation as a British subject, but at the outbreak of war he still held Italian nationality.
    • For many, the requirements for immigration and naturalization have been made more difficult.
    • As early as 1790, Americans began to restrict the naturalization of immigrants.
  • 2Biology
    The introduction of a plant or animal to a region where it is not indigenous.

    the first report of naturalization of this species in the United States
    the successful naturalization of trout in the barren waters of the Sierra
    Example sentencesExamples
    • We used boosted regression trees to identify factors associated with success or failure at the introduction and naturalization stages in each region.
    • During naturalization, the introduced species and biotic components of the habitat begin adapting to each other.
    • As Sampson's notions about nature changed, so too did his techniques of naturalization.
    • The successful naturalization of trout in the barren waters of the Sierra comes close to the ideal of humanity improving nature.
    • With the earlier naturalization of the shad, and later addition of the striped bass, the second aquarium car was a sort of piscine ark.
  • 3The alteration of an adopted foreign word so that it conforms more closely to the phonology or orthography of the adopting language.

    French naturalization of Creole words or phrases
    Example sentencesExamples
    • The 'naturalisation' of the term 'mimbar' from an Islamic context made it identifiable to Muslims and to those from other religious groups.
    • The author establishes his distance from the naturalization of the word in the field of drama in Québec.
    • Given that 'cromulent' presumably means something like 'valid and current', using it to defend an 'obscure or invented word' is clearly an in-joke rather than naturalization of the word itself.
    • To Herbert Spencer ­we owe the naturalisation of the word in English.
    • The subsequent naturalization of the word in English is evident in the sermon literature of the next century.
  • 4The act of causing something to appear natural.

    trailers have contributed to the naturalization of a variety of social desires
    the naturalization of gender roles
    he continued the naturalization of the landscape, removing the old formal garden
    Example sentencesExamples
    • She disrupts the naturalization of heterosexuality and its concomitant gender roles.
    • Whether in ancient Greece or in contemporary society, myths are intrinsic to the process of naturalization and normalization.
    • An effect of Brechtian alienation occurs, and the naturalization of genre is dismantled.
    • How can critical commentary 'mediate the radicalism' without itself performing a pernicious form of naturalisation in making it more accessible?
    • His book is about "naturalization," the long, steady march of early modern history toward forms of representation that deny or repress their own constructed nature.
    • She has convincingly demonstrated that this fusion of figure and concept is based on both a naturalization of allegory and a naturalization of sculpture.
    • One book notes that people tend to naturalize differences between men and women, but that the form that naturalization takes is culturally viable.
    • A way to accomplish naturalization, for artists to legitimize themselves, is to demonstrate the historic links between the artists and others already acknowledged as prime figures in the field.
    • Is Roland Barthes correct that naturalization is the great, unspoken secret of bourgeois aesthetics?
    • Along with its naturalization of fraternity as an ideal, the battlefield constitutes a special set of ethical protocols that makes it legal for honourable citizens to kill each other in the service of higher collective values.
    • Such representations of women, defined and utilized by men for the ideological naturalization of their colonial/countercolonial agendas, also function to contain and neuter female agency.
    • The cliché, in assuming an immediacy of understanding, acts as a mechanism for the naturalisation of sexual difference.
    • There is a need to counter the pervasive naturalization of the global as the economically optimal scale of market forces.
    • And the task of the mythographer is to ask what interests are served by the naturalization of particular convictions and values.
    • The movie nakedly presents elements of that naturalization of roles and of the consequences it produces in a declining middle class.
    • He draws on this naturalization of epistemology to argue for conclusions that are threatening to some of our most deep-rooted beliefs about ourselves.
 
 

Definition of naturalization in US English:

naturalization

(British naturalisation)
nounˌnaCH(ə)rəˌlīˈzāSHən
  • 1The admittance of a foreigner to the citizenship of a country.

    an application for naturalization as a British citizen
    as modifier the naturalization process can be intimidating
    Example sentencesExamples
    • The agency received nearly 2.5 million naturalization petitions and visa applications in July and August.
    • An application was made to the Home Secretary who could grant naturalisation.
    • As early as 1790, Americans began to restrict the naturalization of immigrants.
    • Latvia finalized a citizenship and naturalization law in summer 1994.
    • He has come to America to stay and is eager to complete the naturalization process as soon as possible.
    • Since 1795 Congress had preserved the naturalization of aliens as an exclusively federal domain, leaving the states with no power to create United States citizens.
    • He signed the certificates of naturalisation for the 11 people.
    • As naturalization rates increased, Sicilian Americans began to switch from radical union activity to formal politics.
    • He had applied for naturalisation as a British subject, but at the outbreak of war he still held Italian nationality.
    • Those eligible for naturalisation should be granted citizenship.
    • For many, the requirements for immigration and naturalization have been made more difficult.
    • In most cases, aspiring voters would have to produce an original birth certificate, naturalization papers or a passport.
  • 2Biology
    The introduction of a plant or animal to a region where it is not indigenous.

    the first report of naturalization of this species in the United States
    the successful naturalization of trout in the barren waters of the Sierra
    Example sentencesExamples
    • During naturalization, the introduced species and biotic components of the habitat begin adapting to each other.
    • As Sampson's notions about nature changed, so too did his techniques of naturalization.
    • The successful naturalization of trout in the barren waters of the Sierra comes close to the ideal of humanity improving nature.
    • We used boosted regression trees to identify factors associated with success or failure at the introduction and naturalization stages in each region.
    • With the earlier naturalization of the shad, and later addition of the striped bass, the second aquarium car was a sort of piscine ark.
  • 3The alteration of an adopted foreign word so that it conforms more closely to the phonology or orthography of the adopting language.

    French naturalization of Creole words or phrases
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Given that 'cromulent' presumably means something like 'valid and current', using it to defend an 'obscure or invented word' is clearly an in-joke rather than naturalization of the word itself.
    • The 'naturalisation' of the term 'mimbar' from an Islamic context made it identifiable to Muslims and to those from other religious groups.
    • To Herbert Spencer ­we owe the naturalisation of the word in English.
    • The author establishes his distance from the naturalization of the word in the field of drama in Québec.
    • The subsequent naturalization of the word in English is evident in the sermon literature of the next century.
  • 4The act of causing something to appear natural.

    trailers have contributed to the naturalization of a variety of social desires
    the naturalization of gender roles
    he continued the naturalization of the landscape, removing the old formal garden
    Example sentencesExamples
    • She has convincingly demonstrated that this fusion of figure and concept is based on both a naturalization of allegory and a naturalization of sculpture.
    • She disrupts the naturalization of heterosexuality and its concomitant gender roles.
    • The movie nakedly presents elements of that naturalization of roles and of the consequences it produces in a declining middle class.
    • An effect of Brechtian alienation occurs, and the naturalization of genre is dismantled.
    • Along with its naturalization of fraternity as an ideal, the battlefield constitutes a special set of ethical protocols that makes it legal for honourable citizens to kill each other in the service of higher collective values.
    • Such representations of women, defined and utilized by men for the ideological naturalization of their colonial/countercolonial agendas, also function to contain and neuter female agency.
    • The cliché, in assuming an immediacy of understanding, acts as a mechanism for the naturalisation of sexual difference.
    • Is Roland Barthes correct that naturalization is the great, unspoken secret of bourgeois aesthetics?
    • One book notes that people tend to naturalize differences between men and women, but that the form that naturalization takes is culturally viable.
    • A way to accomplish naturalization, for artists to legitimize themselves, is to demonstrate the historic links between the artists and others already acknowledged as prime figures in the field.
    • His book is about "naturalization," the long, steady march of early modern history toward forms of representation that deny or repress their own constructed nature.
    • He draws on this naturalization of epistemology to argue for conclusions that are threatening to some of our most deep-rooted beliefs about ourselves.
    • Whether in ancient Greece or in contemporary society, myths are intrinsic to the process of naturalization and normalization.
    • And the task of the mythographer is to ask what interests are served by the naturalization of particular convictions and values.
    • There is a need to counter the pervasive naturalization of the global as the economically optimal scale of market forces.
    • How can critical commentary 'mediate the radicalism' without itself performing a pernicious form of naturalisation in making it more accessible?
 
 
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更新时间:2024/11/11 1:17:49