| 释义 | 
		Definition of Stakhanovite in English: Stakhanovitenoun 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 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   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.
 
 
 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: Stakhanovitenounstəˈkɑnəˌvaɪtstəˈkänəˌvīt 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 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.     |