| 释义 | 
		Definition of avowed in English: avowedadjective əˈvaʊdəˈvaʊd attributive That has been asserted, admitted, or stated publicly.  they came to power with the avowed aim of promoting religious toleration  Example sentencesExamples -  The Italian Pontecorvo, an avowed communist, had wanted to make a tract against colonialism.
 -  We are endangered from the outside by our avowed enemies.
 -  His invocation of Lincoln and Washington, and his avowed determination to make hard choices, suggest the former.
 -  Trocchi, novelist and avowed internationalist, could keep quiet no longer.
 -  Sinclair Lewis, however, was an avowed admirer.
 -  Berezovsky is now in exile in London, an avowed enemy of President Putin.
 -  A failed school teacher who became Minister of Education; a one-time Methodist minister turned avowed atheist.
 -  The same general policy was true for adults, and the avowed aim of the justice system was rehabilitation.
 -  Finally, there's Dennis Kucinich, an avowed radical.
 -  Mr. Blunkett was clear in his avowed intention to undertake full consultation.
 -  She firmly believes in her father's avowed words.
 -  Stormfront has become a bridge to the mainstream, where controversial comments strangely mirror the rhetoric of avowed racists.
 -  Likewise Montesquieu in his Essay on Taste owes him more than is avowed.
 -  He is, at once, a forward looking evolutionist, and an avowed eugenicist.
 -  The actions taken by the Israeli forces directly contradict the avowed purpose of their attack.
 -  The defendants avowed intention was to disrupt the airfield.
 -  They're avowed enemies of the current Cuban state.
 -  The indulgence was a consequence of the context, of the avowed project.
 -  In the 2005 parliamentary elections, 99 per cent of Kurds voted for nationalist parties with an avowed secessionist agenda.
 -  The executives of international oil corporations, avowed globalizers in theory, are in practice the friends of regressive political economies.
 
    Definition of avowed in US English: avowedadjectiveəˈvoudəˈvaʊd attributive That has been asserted, admitted, or stated publicly.  they came to power with the avowed aim of promoting religious toleration  Example sentencesExamples -  The actions taken by the Israeli forces directly contradict the avowed purpose of their attack.
 -  Sinclair Lewis, however, was an avowed admirer.
 -  Trocchi, novelist and avowed internationalist, could keep quiet no longer.
 -  She firmly believes in her father's avowed words.
 -  The indulgence was a consequence of the context, of the avowed project.
 -  His invocation of Lincoln and Washington, and his avowed determination to make hard choices, suggest the former.
 -  A failed school teacher who became Minister of Education; a one-time Methodist minister turned avowed atheist.
 -  The Italian Pontecorvo, an avowed communist, had wanted to make a tract against colonialism.
 -  The executives of international oil corporations, avowed globalizers in theory, are in practice the friends of regressive political economies.
 -  The same general policy was true for adults, and the avowed aim of the justice system was rehabilitation.
 -  Likewise Montesquieu in his Essay on Taste owes him more than is avowed.
 -  They're avowed enemies of the current Cuban state.
 -  In the 2005 parliamentary elections, 99 per cent of Kurds voted for nationalist parties with an avowed secessionist agenda.
 -  Stormfront has become a bridge to the mainstream, where controversial comments strangely mirror the rhetoric of avowed racists.
 -  Mr. Blunkett was clear in his avowed intention to undertake full consultation.
 -  Finally, there's Dennis Kucinich, an avowed radical.
 -  Berezovsky is now in exile in London, an avowed enemy of President Putin.
 -  The defendants avowed intention was to disrupt the airfield.
 -  He is, at once, a forward looking evolutionist, and an avowed eugenicist.
 -  We are endangered from the outside by our avowed enemies.
 
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