请输入您要查询的英文单词:

 

单词 Stakhanovite
释义

Definition of Stakhanovite in English:

Stakhanovite

noun stəˈkɑːnəvʌɪtstəˈkanəvʌɪtstəˈkɑnəˌvaɪt
  • 1A worker in the former Soviet Union who was exceptionally hard-working and productive.

    the Stakhanovites succeeded in increasing the quantity of goods produced
    Example sentencesExamples
    • It recognized tens of thousands of women in retailing as labor heroes: exemplary workers, shock workers, and Stakhanovites.
    • Artworks created in the period of the revolutionary avant-garde - by the Suprematists Kasimir Malevich and Clement Redko, for example - are hung next to Stalinist kitsch, e.g., ‘Stakhanovites on Stalin's Road’ from Alexander Deineka.
    • Meanwhile, resentment was mollified by extending the honour, so that a quarter or so of workers in an enterprise could qualify as Stakhanovites.
    • The shock worker campaign propagandists latched on to his achievement, and soon the shock workers became known as Stakhanovites.
    Synonyms
    hard worker, toiler, workhorse, galley slave
    1. 1.1 An exceptionally hard-working or zealous person.
      as modifier she was a Stakhanovite worker in the field of female suffering
      a Stakhanovite train-washing programme
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Given the Stakhanovite imperative at work with the public display of the petition, how many students could conceivably have felt free to express a contrary view in any manner?
      • They claimed outrage at the smear directed at their valiant, Stakhanovite workforce.
      • Kilmarnock's unglamorous engine room had been functioning fitfully, with Alan Mahood hoovering up in the middle, but Holt, usually a Stakhanovite in his labouring, was running out of puff.
      • The Stakhanovite high street spender would power a general recovery in the course of the year, making up for that non-recovery in business investment.
      • Moravcik's background gives him an appreciation of a Stakhanovite work ethic.
      • This is a truly Stakhanovite effort, by all the maintainers, the pilots, the fuelers and unloaders, and by Air Traffic Control.
      • There's no doubt that not only have they been stronger, fitter and better-prepared than any of their international opponents over the last two decades, but that this Stakhanovite reputation has preceded them.
      • She seems to me, from that account, to be a sort of capitalist Stakhanovite, a little lucky, a little phoney, but what the 80s were all about - larger than life greed.
      • Don't allow yourself to be spooked into Stakhanovite overdrive; seek command of your own life.
      • Google co-founder Sergey Brinn left the Soviet Union when he was five years old, but was able to communicate something of the Stakhanovite work ethic to his co-founder US-born Larry Page.
      • The Scotland striker put in a Stakhanovite shift on Thursday night, working Dnipro's rearguard tirelessly and pulling defenders out of position to create openings for others.
      • If anyone feels like slowing down, or taking a break, it need not be occasion for Stakhanovite appeals to work harder.

Derivatives

  • Stakhanovism

  • nounstəˈkanəvɪz(ə)mstəˈkɑːnəvɪz(ə)mstəˈkɑnəˌvɪzəm
    • The real appeal of Stakhanovism was clearly a material one, for exceptionally high wages and special privileges rewarded workers who exceeded the established production norms.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • The authors’ analysis suggests that Stakhanovism had no overall impact on economic development, for good or ill.
      • Nevertheless, Stakhanovism emerged as a movement based on the virtues of working really hard for really long hours, in exchange for the satisfaction of doing so.
      • Being driven by Stakhanovism - an economics psychology and morale of work motivation - Russia drew closer and closer to Stalin's aspirations.
      • One local hero was Aleksei Stakhanov, the Torez miner who became an icon of socialist-realist propaganda in the 1930s and lives on in the concept of production speed-ups known as Stakhanovism.
  • Stakhanovist

  • noun & adjectivestəˈkanəvɪststəˈkɑːnəvɪst
    • It also includes highly skilled workers known as Stakhanovists, in honor of a worker who set new records of production.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Meanwhile, the Stakhanovists themselves were urged to outdo their achievements.
      • The Stakhanovist textile workers get 500 rubles and more, the non-Stakhanovists, 150 rubles or less.
      • Along with being the first Stakhanovist of tennis, he had the asset of the intelligent game-play of a mathematician.
      • On top of it, the bureaucracy too accelerated the growth of a labor aristocracy by showering the Stakhanovists with gifts and privileges.

Origin

1930s: from the name of Aleksei Grigorevich Stakhanov (1906–1977), Russian coal miner.

 
 

Definition of Stakhanovite in US English:

Stakhanovite

nounstəˈkɑnəˌvaɪtstəˈkänəˌvīt
  • 1A worker in the former Soviet Union who was exceptionally hardworking and productive.

    the Stakhanovites succeeded in increasing the quantity of goods produced
    Example sentencesExamples
    • The shock worker campaign propagandists latched on to his achievement, and soon the shock workers became known as Stakhanovites.
    • It recognized tens of thousands of women in retailing as labor heroes: exemplary workers, shock workers, and Stakhanovites.
    • Artworks created in the period of the revolutionary avant-garde - by the Suprematists Kasimir Malevich and Clement Redko, for example - are hung next to Stalinist kitsch, e.g., ‘Stakhanovites on Stalin's Road’ from Alexander Deineka.
    • Meanwhile, resentment was mollified by extending the honour, so that a quarter or so of workers in an enterprise could qualify as Stakhanovites.
    Synonyms
    hard worker, toiler, workhorse, galley slave
    1. 1.1 An exceptionally hardworking or zealous person.
      as modifier she was a Stakhanovite worker in the field of female suffering
      a Stakhanovite train-washing program
      Example sentencesExamples
      • She seems to me, from that account, to be a sort of capitalist Stakhanovite, a little lucky, a little phoney, but what the 80s were all about - larger than life greed.
      • Given the Stakhanovite imperative at work with the public display of the petition, how many students could conceivably have felt free to express a contrary view in any manner?
      • Kilmarnock's unglamorous engine room had been functioning fitfully, with Alan Mahood hoovering up in the middle, but Holt, usually a Stakhanovite in his labouring, was running out of puff.
      • The Stakhanovite high street spender would power a general recovery in the course of the year, making up for that non-recovery in business investment.
      • Google co-founder Sergey Brinn left the Soviet Union when he was five years old, but was able to communicate something of the Stakhanovite work ethic to his co-founder US-born Larry Page.
      • If anyone feels like slowing down, or taking a break, it need not be occasion for Stakhanovite appeals to work harder.
      • There's no doubt that not only have they been stronger, fitter and better-prepared than any of their international opponents over the last two decades, but that this Stakhanovite reputation has preceded them.
      • They claimed outrage at the smear directed at their valiant, Stakhanovite workforce.
      • This is a truly Stakhanovite effort, by all the maintainers, the pilots, the fuelers and unloaders, and by Air Traffic Control.
      • Don't allow yourself to be spooked into Stakhanovite overdrive; seek command of your own life.
      • Moravcik's background gives him an appreciation of a Stakhanovite work ethic.
      • The Scotland striker put in a Stakhanovite shift on Thursday night, working Dnipro's rearguard tirelessly and pulling defenders out of position to create openings for others.

Origin

1930s: from the name of Aleksei Grigorevich Stakhanov (1906–1977), Russian coal miner.

 
 
随便看

 

英语词典包含464360条英英释义在线翻译词条,基本涵盖了全部常用单词的英英翻译及用法,是英语学习的有利工具。

 

Copyright © 2004-2022 Newdu.com All Rights Reserved
更新时间:2024/12/23 5:27:58