释义 |
Definition of radicalize in English: radicalize(also radicalise) verb ˈradɪklʌɪzˈrædəkəˌlaɪz [with object]Cause (someone) to adopt radical positions on political or social issues. some of those involved had been radicalized by the Vietnam War Example sentencesExamples - Soon I was radicalized by the realization that the black pioneers and creators of this incomparable music were the systematic victims of appalling prejudice and discrimination.
- Like so many of my generation, being on the anti-war demonstrations in the last couple of years has helped to radicalise me.
- It's also easy to see how angry people radicalised by a lifetime of oppression might find a religion that provides outlet for their hate attractive.
- This experience radicalised him and in 1839 he joined the Chartists.
- That political process radicalised people and helped empower them.
- Most impressive of all, perhaps, is evidence that the war is radicalising students out of the political apathy that has characterised them throughout the 90s.
- We now know that our soldiers were as radicalized by the sixties as the college protesters.
- As it did for many, the Depression radicalized Miller.
- Nat Turner's rebellion radicalized opponents of slavery and provided a preview of the impending sectional crisis.
- The legal and electoral attacks on race-conscious affirmative action and the advent of other conservative public policies are said to be radicalizing scholars.
- The episodes of violence here have radicalized some residents who have vowed revenge, residents said.
- Still, the harassment further radicalized him against an institution he already despised.
- Workers and students were radicalized by the war in Vietnam.
- But like many Algerians, he was radicalized in 1991.
- And she was radicalized by attending Commonwealth College in Arkansas, an institution started by the organizers of the Southern Tenant Farmers' Union.
- The murder of Malcolm X in 1965 radicalized Jones.
- But his years in prison changed him, radicalized him.
- That begins to radicalize people, whether it is farmers, or workers in the 1890s, or the millions of people who lost everything from nest eggs in banks to jobs during the Depression.
- His time in the Silver Valley, perhaps combined with his parents' unionism, radicalized him.
- He went off to the US and what he saw radicalised him in ways that would change him.
Definition of radicalize in US English: radicalize(British radicalise) verbˈradəkəˌlīzˈrædəkəˌlaɪz [with object]Cause (someone) to adopt radical positions on political or social issues. I'm trying to mobilize and radicalize the liberals Example sentencesExamples - The episodes of violence here have radicalized some residents who have vowed revenge, residents said.
- That begins to radicalize people, whether it is farmers, or workers in the 1890s, or the millions of people who lost everything from nest eggs in banks to jobs during the Depression.
- Soon I was radicalized by the realization that the black pioneers and creators of this incomparable music were the systematic victims of appalling prejudice and discrimination.
- This experience radicalised him and in 1839 he joined the Chartists.
- But like many Algerians, he was radicalized in 1991.
- As it did for many, the Depression radicalized Miller.
- But his years in prison changed him, radicalized him.
- Workers and students were radicalized by the war in Vietnam.
- And she was radicalized by attending Commonwealth College in Arkansas, an institution started by the organizers of the Southern Tenant Farmers' Union.
- Most impressive of all, perhaps, is evidence that the war is radicalising students out of the political apathy that has characterised them throughout the 90s.
- It's also easy to see how angry people radicalised by a lifetime of oppression might find a religion that provides outlet for their hate attractive.
- The murder of Malcolm X in 1965 radicalized Jones.
- Nat Turner's rebellion radicalized opponents of slavery and provided a preview of the impending sectional crisis.
- He went off to the US and what he saw radicalised him in ways that would change him.
- Like so many of my generation, being on the anti-war demonstrations in the last couple of years has helped to radicalise me.
- Still, the harassment further radicalized him against an institution he already despised.
- We now know that our soldiers were as radicalized by the sixties as the college protesters.
- That political process radicalised people and helped empower them.
- The legal and electoral attacks on race-conscious affirmative action and the advent of other conservative public policies are said to be radicalizing scholars.
- His time in the Silver Valley, perhaps combined with his parents' unionism, radicalized him.
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