republican

英 [rɪ'pʌblɪk(ə)n] 美 [rɪ'pʌblɪkən]
  • adj. 共和国的;共和政体的;共和主义的;拥护共和政体的
  • n. 共和主义者
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republican 共和主义者

来自 republic,共和。

republican (adj.)
1712, "belonging to a republic, of the nature of a republic, consonant to the principles of a republic," from republic + -an. The French republican calendar was in use from Nov. 26, 1793 to Dec. 31, 1805.
republican (n.)
"one who favors a republic or republican principles" (or, as Johnson puts it, "One who thinks a commonwealth without monarchy the best government"), 1690s; see from republican (adj.). With capital R-, in reference to a member of a specific U.S. political party (the Anti-Federalists) from 1782, though this was not the ancestor of the modern U.S. Republican Party, which dates from 1854.
1. Amy's own Republican sympathies strengthened as the days passed.
埃米个人对共和党的支持与日俱增。

来自柯林斯例句

2. "I'll get the Republican nomination," he assured me. "It's in the bag."
“我会得到共和党提名的,”他向我保证,“这是十拿九稳的事。”

来自柯林斯例句

3. Republican strategists are taking particular aim at Democratic senators.
共和党的战略家正尖锐地攻击民主党的参议员。

来自柯林斯例句

4. Republican leaders called him a disgrace to the party.
共和党领导人称他是全党的耻辱。

来自柯林斯例句

5. Yet it is feared the Republican leadership could split over the agreement.
但有人担心,共和党的领导层可能会在该协议上出现意见分歧。

来自柯林斯例句