释义 |
Definition of politicize in English: politicize(British politicise) verb pəˈlɪtɪsʌɪzpəˈlɪdəˌsaɪz [with object]often as adjective politicized1Cause (an activity or event) to become political in character. wage bargaining in the public sector became more politicized Example sentencesExamples - Another reason why British deaths have become a bigger issue even as there has been relatively fewer of them is that sections of the anti-war movement and anti-war commentators have cynically politicised these deaths.
- His edict achieved the opposite effect of what he intended, politicizing an apolitical event.
- When people protest the way the Administration is let off the hook until the election, of course, the charge will be that they are attempting to politicize the process.
- All political parties, those in government and the ones in the opposition have worked to politicise the budget process so much that it has become a public spectacle rather than the hard-headed public accounting process it should be.
- The case serves as yet another reminder of how sadly politicized the confirmation process too often becomes in today's political climate.
- Unfortunately, we have politicized the process of divorce, so abuse and bias will be even stronger now.
- Politicians are bound to politicize this disaster, as they do with all other world events, in a way that helps them accumulate more power and confiscate more wealth from their citizens.
- The implicit presumption was always that politicised corrections for market failures would work perfectly.
- In the process, they've done German popular culture quite a service, politicizing an event that had long slipped under the radar of public debate in the country.
- If Democrats have politicized the scandal and exaggerated it, Republicans have inexcusably tried to whitewash it.
- This is extremely important as any campaign where one (individual or collectivity) is attempting to achieve a political objective (tuition decreases) must politicise the process.
- If textbook screening is politicized, confidence in the censorship system itself will be lost.
- Universities are centres of freedom of speech, granted, but we have to admit that this is a hugely politicized event being proposed at the one campus in Canada where this issue has exploded into violence.
- This is hardly a circumstance that should be welcomed in the academic disciplines, as it echoes the partisan and highly politicized award process set up at the National Endowment for the Humanities a dozen years ago.
- Some have argued that the ministry opened the bid at a time when the legislature is in recess because the ministry didn't want lawmakers to step in and politicize the privatization process.
- If judges are horribly political, politicized opposition to nominees is called for.
- The spectacle emphasised how much he seeks to transform our style and substance by politicising every event for its propaganda potential in a divided Australia.
- Nuns, in contrast to their male counterparts, not only politicised their activities but did so with a new feminist consciousness.
- Plus he's concerned that the Republicans may be politicizing the political process.
- So as you can imagine the company's work is highly politicized.
- 1.1 Make (someone) politically aware.
we successfully politicized a generation of women Example sentencesExamples - He was politicised from an early age, when he first started listening to reggae and dub music.
- And the people that are your political opponents will politicize anybody you appoint anyway.
- I was never politicized before that, but I had to come to grips with this latent fascism, otherwise I couldn't have unfolded as an artist at all.
- In 1976 Soweto happened, and South African boys and girls spilled across the border into Lesotho, politicising us even more.
- Rather than embittering or psychopathologizing him, his rape had politicized him, giving him a terrifying lucid insight into the idiotic evil of the male sex drive.
- What it did was politicise our audience which at the time were predominately young people unfamiliar with trade unionism and often hostile to it from an anarchist perspective.
- It was a short step from such mainstream reportage to the reports of the FBI files, in which, as shown below, the FBI branded Baker as a serious threat and thoroughly racialized and politicized her.
- Women were politicised by the strike, and those who attended the conference hold true to those politics, despite the difficulties with which New Labour present them.
- But it also politicized us by brutally and bitterly fracturing our community.
- Anyone proposing such a project, which in effect aims to politicize young people, is inevitably warily received and closely scrutinized.
- The polarizing of the population has been a wondrous gift to debate, and we are more politicized and aware than ever before.
- A lot of those students were politicised by a program that was run by the mainstream union movement, but then they we saw these students themselves take the issue a lot further and a lot faster perhaps than the mainstream unions had been.
- When either party tries to politicize God or co-opt religious communities, it makes a terrible mistake.
- After living with conflict for so long, the East Timorese are a highly politicised people.
- Four undercover agents in China were working to politicise the workers, to get them to revolt against their exploitation.
- In the ‘golden age of activism,’ students became politicized by direct experience.
- The family was politicized as the foundation of patriarchal power.
- She was politicised in the mid-1980s when the miners' strike tore apart communities like the one in which she'd grown up.
- Angry young men were politicized, while rebellious young women were sexualized.
- Many women were politicized by the Republic's anticlerical policies, both ideologically, if they were practising Catholics, and practically, for example if their children were at schools run by religious orders.
- 1.2no object Engage in or talk about politics.
we talk and squabble and politicize about education as a vote-catching agency
Definition of politicize in US English: politicize(British politicise) verbpəˈlidəˌsīzpəˈlɪdəˌsaɪz [with object]often as adjective politicized1Cause (an activity or event) to become political in character. art was becoming politicized attempts to politicize America's curricula Example sentencesExamples - His edict achieved the opposite effect of what he intended, politicizing an apolitical event.
- So as you can imagine the company's work is highly politicized.
- Unfortunately, we have politicized the process of divorce, so abuse and bias will be even stronger now.
- In the process, they've done German popular culture quite a service, politicizing an event that had long slipped under the radar of public debate in the country.
- Universities are centres of freedom of speech, granted, but we have to admit that this is a hugely politicized event being proposed at the one campus in Canada where this issue has exploded into violence.
- Plus he's concerned that the Republicans may be politicizing the political process.
- If Democrats have politicized the scandal and exaggerated it, Republicans have inexcusably tried to whitewash it.
- If textbook screening is politicized, confidence in the censorship system itself will be lost.
- Another reason why British deaths have become a bigger issue even as there has been relatively fewer of them is that sections of the anti-war movement and anti-war commentators have cynically politicised these deaths.
- The case serves as yet another reminder of how sadly politicized the confirmation process too often becomes in today's political climate.
- Nuns, in contrast to their male counterparts, not only politicised their activities but did so with a new feminist consciousness.
- The spectacle emphasised how much he seeks to transform our style and substance by politicising every event for its propaganda potential in a divided Australia.
- This is hardly a circumstance that should be welcomed in the academic disciplines, as it echoes the partisan and highly politicized award process set up at the National Endowment for the Humanities a dozen years ago.
- Politicians are bound to politicize this disaster, as they do with all other world events, in a way that helps them accumulate more power and confiscate more wealth from their citizens.
- The implicit presumption was always that politicised corrections for market failures would work perfectly.
- All political parties, those in government and the ones in the opposition have worked to politicise the budget process so much that it has become a public spectacle rather than the hard-headed public accounting process it should be.
- If judges are horribly political, politicized opposition to nominees is called for.
- This is extremely important as any campaign where one (individual or collectivity) is attempting to achieve a political objective (tuition decreases) must politicise the process.
- Some have argued that the ministry opened the bid at a time when the legislature is in recess because the ministry didn't want lawmakers to step in and politicize the privatization process.
- When people protest the way the Administration is let off the hook until the election, of course, the charge will be that they are attempting to politicize the process.
- 1.1 Make (someone) politically aware, especially by persuading them of the truth of views considered radical.
we successfully politicized a generation of women Example sentencesExamples - He was politicised from an early age, when he first started listening to reggae and dub music.
- A lot of those students were politicised by a program that was run by the mainstream union movement, but then they we saw these students themselves take the issue a lot further and a lot faster perhaps than the mainstream unions had been.
- What it did was politicise our audience which at the time were predominately young people unfamiliar with trade unionism and often hostile to it from an anarchist perspective.
- After living with conflict for so long, the East Timorese are a highly politicised people.
- Rather than embittering or psychopathologizing him, his rape had politicized him, giving him a terrifying lucid insight into the idiotic evil of the male sex drive.
- In 1976 Soweto happened, and South African boys and girls spilled across the border into Lesotho, politicising us even more.
- The polarizing of the population has been a wondrous gift to debate, and we are more politicized and aware than ever before.
- And the people that are your political opponents will politicize anybody you appoint anyway.
- Women were politicised by the strike, and those who attended the conference hold true to those politics, despite the difficulties with which New Labour present them.
- Many women were politicized by the Republic's anticlerical policies, both ideologically, if they were practising Catholics, and practically, for example if their children were at schools run by religious orders.
- But it also politicized us by brutally and bitterly fracturing our community.
- In the ‘golden age of activism,’ students became politicized by direct experience.
- It was a short step from such mainstream reportage to the reports of the FBI files, in which, as shown below, the FBI branded Baker as a serious threat and thoroughly racialized and politicized her.
- Anyone proposing such a project, which in effect aims to politicize young people, is inevitably warily received and closely scrutinized.
- Angry young men were politicized, while rebellious young women were sexualized.
- Four undercover agents in China were working to politicise the workers, to get them to revolt against their exploitation.
- When either party tries to politicize God or co-opt religious communities, it makes a terrible mistake.
- The family was politicized as the foundation of patriarchal power.
- I was never politicized before that, but I had to come to grips with this latent fascism, otherwise I couldn't have unfolded as an artist at all.
- She was politicised in the mid-1980s when the miners' strike tore apart communities like the one in which she'd grown up.
- 1.2no object Engage in or talk about politics.
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