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单词 neoconservative
释义

Definition of neoconservative in English:

neoconservative

adjective niːəʊkənˈsəːvətɪvˌnioʊkənˈsərvədɪv
  • Relating to or denoting a return to a modified form of a traditional viewpoint, in particular a political ideology characterized by an emphasis on free-market capitalism and an interventionist foreign policy.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • A hegemonic spirit nonetheless underlies both the liberal activism and the neoconservative unilateralism evident in much of recent American foreign policy.
    • Yet a handful of committed neoconservative defense intellectuals in and out of government convinced the president, rightly or wrongly, to back the idea.
    • Of course, this idea is implicit in much liberal as well as neoconservative thinking, but such an unambiguous statement is offensive to all sides.
    • However, editors and well-paid media pundits are well aware that social and political opposition to the neoconservative order in the US poses a direct threat to their own privileged existence in Britain.
    • Neoconservative wars create democracies that are bounded within neoconservative precepts, like extremely limited government and considerable corporate power.
    • This was the side of politics, the neoconservative side, that said that they had one big thing to offer in the war against terror - the doctrine of pre-emption.
    • This is a classic example of neoconservative obfuscation.
    • Mead labels the rise of neoconservative thinking in international relations as ‘American Revivalism’ - the religious overtone of the phrase is intentional.
    • On the other side are a few dozen neoconservative think tank scholars and defense policy intellectuals.
    • By the end of the 1990s, neoconservative tolerance for such perspectives was wearing rather thin.
    • And they no longer muse about which nations might be next on the target list, disappointing their most fervent neoconservative supporters as often as they please them.
    • But when a neoconservative Republican and a liberal Democrat can agree on an issue it gives me hope for the future of political discourse in the blogosphere.
    • I think, however, that what is more likely is that neoconservative intellectuals and blowhards (whom you despise) have gained more influence.
    • Political Straussians and their neoconservative allies argue that the spread of democracy is a panacea for many of America's global problems.
    • However, to speak against the neoconservative Republican and liberal Democrat ideal of a powerful central government is as impermissible as to utter words deemed to offend the legally privileged.
    • This is not necessarily because the journalist and the relief worker share a liberal outlook; a neoconservative pundit would fare no better with the NCO, for example.
    • What was still being worked out at that time was the propaganda piece, a sustained refinement of the storyline that had been hinted at in neoconservative circles and the White House for months, even years.
    • Other neoconservative organizations represented in the coalition by more than one member include AEI and Freedom House.
    • Meanwhile, neoconservative journalists have been channeling the administration's thinking.
    • It should not be a freak show for neoconservative politics and its pursuit of the culture war.
noun niːəʊkənˈsəːvətɪvˌnioʊkənˈsərvədɪv
  • A person with neoconservative views.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • The neoconservatives consistently misrepresent the right as culturally open and committed to equality of opportunity.
    • Actually neoconservatives do tolerate welfare as a way of controlling people, at least they admit it.
    • The notorious unilateralism of the neoconservatives in Washington never boded well for the billing of Cancun as a more consensual round of talks.
    • When the Cold War ended, these neoconservatives began casting about for a new crusade to give meaning to their lives.
    • Current US assertiveness cannot be seen simply as resulting from the short-sighted view of a few neoconservatives giddy at the thought of all those bombs.
    • Current campus conservatism isn't part of any clandestine plan organized by neoconservatives in a back room of the White House.
    • In temperament, too, neoconservatives have revealed themselves as the antithesis of conservative.
    • But this invasion will not be the cakewalk neoconservatives predict.
    • The collapse of the vital center pushed neoconservatives and the Democratic Party leadership in opposite directions.
    • It was mostly just an excuse to examine the democracy-promoting credentials of neoconservatives.
    • The neoconservatives, to my complete surprise, were not pleased.
    • In the process of describing the neoconservatives, not a single mention is made of the policies or policy-makers of the Democratic Party.
    • At last, the global justice movement has found a vision as expansive and planet-wide as that of the American neoconservatives.
    • The clash of civilizations sought by the Bush administration's neoconservatives appears to be nearly at hand.
    • This was thought up by the neoconservatives who saw no bounds to US power and pooh-poohed any sort of concerns about overextension.
    • They were neither the noble heroes depicted by neoconservatives nor the villains depicted by leftist debunkers.
    • The self-styled neoconservatives, for example, are the antithesis of conservatism.
    • It does not, as the neoconservatives argue, ignore power; it redefines power as surveillance.
    • His book could have complemented the work of these and the many others who have exposed the real agenda of the US neoconservatives, but he has missed the opportunity.
    • It thoroughly mixes up conservatives, neoconservatives and libertarians.

Derivatives

  • neoconservatism

  • noun ˌniːəʊkənˈsəːvətɪz(ə)mˌnioʊk(ə)nˈsərvədɪz(ə)m
    mass noun
    • A political ideology characterized by an emphasis on free-market capitalism and an interventionist foreign policy.

      neoconservatism emerged as a force in America in the 1980s
      Example sentencesExamples
      • He might have described himself as a conservative social democrat, of the sort that might plausibly gravitate toward neoconservatism.
      • But although neoconservatism is almost always globalist, it is not intrinsically identical with globalism.
      • In this sense the WTO and NAFTA constitutionalized the ideological program of neoconservatism, representing a colossal breakthrough toward creating a global market unrestrained by government.
 
 

Definition of neoconservative in US English:

neoconservative

adjectiveˌnioʊkənˈsərvədɪvˌnēōkənˈsərvədiv
  • Relating to or denoting a return to a modified form of a traditional viewpoint, in particular a political ideology characterized by an emphasis on free-market capitalism and an interventionist foreign policy.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Political Straussians and their neoconservative allies argue that the spread of democracy is a panacea for many of America's global problems.
    • On the other side are a few dozen neoconservative think tank scholars and defense policy intellectuals.
    • Mead labels the rise of neoconservative thinking in international relations as ‘American Revivalism’ - the religious overtone of the phrase is intentional.
    • By the end of the 1990s, neoconservative tolerance for such perspectives was wearing rather thin.
    • And they no longer muse about which nations might be next on the target list, disappointing their most fervent neoconservative supporters as often as they please them.
    • Other neoconservative organizations represented in the coalition by more than one member include AEI and Freedom House.
    • However, to speak against the neoconservative Republican and liberal Democrat ideal of a powerful central government is as impermissible as to utter words deemed to offend the legally privileged.
    • Yet a handful of committed neoconservative defense intellectuals in and out of government convinced the president, rightly or wrongly, to back the idea.
    • Neoconservative wars create democracies that are bounded within neoconservative precepts, like extremely limited government and considerable corporate power.
    • I think, however, that what is more likely is that neoconservative intellectuals and blowhards (whom you despise) have gained more influence.
    • What was still being worked out at that time was the propaganda piece, a sustained refinement of the storyline that had been hinted at in neoconservative circles and the White House for months, even years.
    • Meanwhile, neoconservative journalists have been channeling the administration's thinking.
    • This is not necessarily because the journalist and the relief worker share a liberal outlook; a neoconservative pundit would fare no better with the NCO, for example.
    • But when a neoconservative Republican and a liberal Democrat can agree on an issue it gives me hope for the future of political discourse in the blogosphere.
    • A hegemonic spirit nonetheless underlies both the liberal activism and the neoconservative unilateralism evident in much of recent American foreign policy.
    • It should not be a freak show for neoconservative politics and its pursuit of the culture war.
    • This was the side of politics, the neoconservative side, that said that they had one big thing to offer in the war against terror - the doctrine of pre-emption.
    • This is a classic example of neoconservative obfuscation.
    • Of course, this idea is implicit in much liberal as well as neoconservative thinking, but such an unambiguous statement is offensive to all sides.
    • However, editors and well-paid media pundits are well aware that social and political opposition to the neoconservative order in the US poses a direct threat to their own privileged existence in Britain.
nounˌnioʊkənˈsərvədɪvˌnēōkənˈsərvədiv
  • A person with neoconservative views.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Current US assertiveness cannot be seen simply as resulting from the short-sighted view of a few neoconservatives giddy at the thought of all those bombs.
    • Actually neoconservatives do tolerate welfare as a way of controlling people, at least they admit it.
    • But this invasion will not be the cakewalk neoconservatives predict.
    • It thoroughly mixes up conservatives, neoconservatives and libertarians.
    • The self-styled neoconservatives, for example, are the antithesis of conservatism.
    • Current campus conservatism isn't part of any clandestine plan organized by neoconservatives in a back room of the White House.
    • The neoconservatives consistently misrepresent the right as culturally open and committed to equality of opportunity.
    • His book could have complemented the work of these and the many others who have exposed the real agenda of the US neoconservatives, but he has missed the opportunity.
    • This was thought up by the neoconservatives who saw no bounds to US power and pooh-poohed any sort of concerns about overextension.
    • They were neither the noble heroes depicted by neoconservatives nor the villains depicted by leftist debunkers.
    • When the Cold War ended, these neoconservatives began casting about for a new crusade to give meaning to their lives.
    • It was mostly just an excuse to examine the democracy-promoting credentials of neoconservatives.
    • It does not, as the neoconservatives argue, ignore power; it redefines power as surveillance.
    • In temperament, too, neoconservatives have revealed themselves as the antithesis of conservative.
    • At last, the global justice movement has found a vision as expansive and planet-wide as that of the American neoconservatives.
    • The neoconservatives, to my complete surprise, were not pleased.
    • The clash of civilizations sought by the Bush administration's neoconservatives appears to be nearly at hand.
    • The collapse of the vital center pushed neoconservatives and the Democratic Party leadership in opposite directions.
    • In the process of describing the neoconservatives, not a single mention is made of the policies or policy-makers of the Democratic Party.
    • The notorious unilateralism of the neoconservatives in Washington never boded well for the billing of Cancun as a more consensual round of talks.
 
 
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更新时间:2024/9/21 22:19:26