释义 |
neo-con, a. and n. N. Amer. (chiefly U.S.).|niːəʊˈkɒn| Also neocon. [Abbrev. of neo-conservative adj. and n.] = neo-conservative adj. and n. s.v. neo- 1 a.
1979Washington Post 20 Feb. b4/2 The neocon movement has roots in the 18th-century concept of Edmund Burke. 1979Maclean's Mag. 13 Aug. 50/3 This tends to make neocons very keen on liberty in the economic sense and a little less sensitive to it in manners and mores. 1985Village Voice (N.Y.) 8 Jan. 10/2 Is this born-again font yet another sign of encroaching neocon hegemony? 1985W. Safire in N.Y. Times Mag. 18 Aug. 8/2 Suddenly most right-wingers started calling themselves rightists or neo-cons, short for neo-conservatives. 1988N.Y. Times 18 Aug. a27/5 The neo-con intellectuals are privately dismayed at the choice of ‘a Kemp without Kemp's baggage’. |