请输入您要查询的英文单词:

 

单词 membership
释义
membershipmem‧ber‧ship /ˈmembəʃɪp $ -ər-/ ●●● S3 W2 noun Examples
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER DICTIONARIES
  • Membership has dropped by 500,000 since 1986.
  • Membership is limited to the under-40s.
  • Canada's membership of NATO
  • Did you renew your membership in the sailing club?
  • Obviously the veterans' association has a rather old and declining membership.
  • The membership was totally against admitting women to the club.
  • The Bishop's Stortford Photographic Society now has a membership of over 50.
  • To qualify for membership, you must be 55 or older.
  • What is the cost of membership?
  • When you join the society, you will be issued a membership card.
EXAMPLES FROM THE CORPUS
  • Ask at the Box Office for membership details the next time you are in town.
  • Did Winchester have a right of appeal apart from membership?
  • How have you managed to make use of your membership of the House of Lords in support of our national heritage?
  • That is, membership of an exchange rate union is incompatible with the pursuit of an independent monetary policy.
  • The membership of the Association totals more than 700 across the country.
  • Today, it has a membership of over one thousand.
  • Wesleyan membership in 1816 was 189,777 to which the breakaway New Connexion added only 8,146.
Thesaurus
Longman Language Activatora member of an organization or formal group
a person, organization, country etc that belongs to a club, a political party, or a group: · The club is hoping to attract more members.member of: · She's a member of the local drama society.· Brooks is a very valuable member of the team.· Is Switzerland a member of the European Union?club/union/party member: · 80% of union members are opposed to going on strike over this issue.
all the members of a club or a similar organization: · The membership was totally against admitting women to the club.· Obviously the veterans' association has a rather old and declining membership.have a membership of 50/100/1000 etc: · The Bishop's Stortford Photographic Society now has a membership of over 50.
when someone is a member
when someone is a member of an organization or formal group: · What is the cost of membership?· Membership is limited to the under-40s.membership of British: · Canada's membership of NATOmembership in American: · Did you renew your membership in the sailing club?membership card: · When you join the society, you will be issued a membership card.
formal when someone is connected with a political party, religious organization etc - used in official contexts: political/religious affiliation: · They asked about his religious beliefs and political affiliation.affiliation to/with: · Throughout his long life, he retained his affiliation to the Labour Party.
Collocations
COLLOCATIONS FROM THE ENTRYverbs
(=officially ask to be a member)· To apply for membership, simply return the attached form.
(=become a member again for another period of time)· Please renew your membership by January 15.
(=stop someone being a member)· His membership was terminated for ‘unprofessional conduct’.
(=be accepted as a member)· Montenegro was granted membership of the UN in 2006.
(=not be accepted as a member)· She was refused membership of the club because she was a woman.
(=it comes to an end)· We will send you a letter when your membership is about to expire.
ADJECTIVES/NOUN + membership
(=membership of a particular group)· How much do you pay for your gym membership?
(=with all the rights that are allowed to members)· Poland was eager to gain full membership in the European Union.
(=with only some of the rights allowed to members)· In the early 1990s, the Soviet Union was offered associate membership of the International Monetary Fund.
(=having been given membership as an honor)· His work won him honorary membership of the London Medical Society.
membership + NOUN
· You will need a valid membership card to enter the Sports Centre.
(also membership dues) (=money you must pay to become a member)· The current annual membership fee is £20.
COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES
· Do you have a library membership card?
 The golf club has closed membership.
· Club membership costs £300 per year.
(=a fee to become a member of a club or organization)· The gym’s yearly membership fee is £250.
 I need to renew my passport this year.
· He recently resigned his membership of the National Rifle Association.
COLLOCATIONS FROM THE CORPUSADJECTIVE
· Participants must enroll in advance and pay a $ 40 annual membership fee.
· Interested parties have the choice of full club membership for £10,000 or associate membership for £2,500.
· This scheme is beginning now and therefore also gives three months extra free membership.· All winners receive a year's free membership.· Free parking. Free club membership.· Within a fortnight, the committee had reconvened and given my father free life membership.· We hold our hands up and will be writing to him to offer a year's free membership.· Do remember that anyone who becomes a member now gets free membership until December 31st.
· The annual subscription would increase from overseas to the full membership rate. referred to the capital needed to set it up.· But it also reserves the right to do so by insisting on full membership for them, which includes nuclear deterrence.· The vast majority of members had opted for the full price membership.· Or did it do the best it could from an ultraconservative group of selections given by the full membership?· As we also noticed in chapter 3, we can not predict the full membership of the set on phonological grounds.· So he threw open the gates and welcomed all baptized persons into full church membership.· At that stage, the pressures for full membership are bound to mount at home and overseas.
· The Institute of Directors has a total membership of 33,500, only 2,600 of them women.· CareFirst reported that its total membership in 2000 grew by 8.1 percent -- to 2.8 million -- over the previous year.· Aldermen were indirectly elected by the councillors for a six-year term and comprised one-quarter of the total council membership.· Mike Johnson, a Phoenix-area computer engineer who represents several militias, puts the total membership at 2, 000.· The electorate is the total corporate membership of the Association.· Golf, for instance, has a relatively high total cost because membership and equipment costs are relatively high.· Only twenty-seven new members had been enrolled since the Leeds Congress, and the total membership still stood at less than one hundred.
· Now union membership is in decline, and budgets are tight.· The new leaders vowed to change the national trend of declining union membership.· They saw an aging union membership and no new blood coming in.
NOUN
· Club 2000 features an Access Control System which enables members to book and use facilities with a single magnetic strip membership card.· Once there, just show your membership card and take a locker.· And there was the mystifying membership card for the Caravan Club of Great Britain.· Susskind Eikhl had said that he could get me a temporary membership card in the Writers' Club.· Letters, membership cards, bills, receipts.· There is no membership card or secret handshake.· They might even give me a guest membership card, who could tell?
· But church membership has plunged from nearly 8,000 in 1984 to about 2,000.· Emerson broke with the mere conventions of church membership.· It is precisely such initiatives from denominations that are needed if the decline in church membership is to be halted.· Excommunication also remained out of the question because much of the Church membership stood in awe of these exploits.· The first step was to enrol as a soldier, the Army equivalent of church membership.· He complained that newcomers forgot to bring church membership certificates along, a sure sign that they expected no church at all.· This phase of religious intensification began in the late 1950s and early 1960s when church membership began to grow across all denominations.· So he threw open the gates and welcomed all baptized persons into full church membership.
· Create additional revenue from membership fees 5.· Participants must enroll in advance and pay a $ 40 annual membership fee.· His church urgently needs repair, and compulsory membership fees would help keep it out of debt.· A health care consumer council would be created and would include anyone over age 16 who paid a $ 10 membership fee.· And as the lifeboats are run entirely on voluntary contributions and membership fees, the £6 you give to us is vital.· A temporary membership fee is $ 5, an annual fee about $ 25.· The rest of the cash comes from sponsorship, membership fees, donations and ticket sales.
· Immediately after his election Kucan announced that he would renounce his party membership for the duration of his four-year term.· In most countries these activists are members of political parties, although party membership is not necessarily synonymous with political activism.· Nearly 80 percent of Party membership was unemployed, with serious effects on Party finance and organization.· Lamm said one of the specific promises he got from Perot was that he would be given the Reform Party membership list.· In early 1931 Party membership dropped to 2,500, the lowest level in its history.· Party policy and the implications of party membership were less than clear.· But they are banned from party membership and can not vote for the party at election time.· However, the number of people willing to make the commitment to Communist party membership remained disproportionately small.
VERB
· Britain has also persuaded our partners to welcome new countries who apply for Community membership.· After I had published a dozen pieces, I could apply for full membership.· This does not apply to membership or employment in any public body, e.g., an electricity authority.· She says she once applied for membership in the party, but never knew whether she had been accepted.· A number of other institutions have recently applied for corporate membership.· It was about this time that Fred McKinley was invited to apply for membership.· The Society has also applied for membership of the Association of Independent Museums.· Further honours awaited him at Bologna, where he applied for membership of the Accademia Filarmonica.
· It had been further modified to include in its membership all four university resident tutors and six education officers from participating LEAs.· Moreover, far from excluding anyone, this would be a way of including the existing membership of the individual groupings.
· We have actually increased our individual membership which is really a marvellous achievement.· Our aim is, of course, to attract newcomers to our classes and to increase membership.· Our most important target for 1986 is to increase membership of the Society.· Prompt response to requests would help to ease the pressure as would a concerted effort being made to increase membership.· Already some teachers have thought and acted upon ingenious schemes to increase membership and to make ourselves more financially self-supporting.· His union will spend £1.5m over the next two years in an attempt to increase individual membership.· Any private union good or service whose level is increasing in membership generates similar predictions. l 3.
· Please, once again, remind all your present members to renew membership and try to enrol as many new members as possible.
1[uncountable] when someone is a member of a club, group, or organizationmembership of Greece first applied for membership of the EU in 1975.membership in American English I forgot to renew my membership in the sailing club. You should carry your membership card with you at all times. Membership fees are being increased this year.2[countable, uncountable] all the members of a club, group, or organization:  The membership voted to change the rules about women members.GRAMMAR: Singular or plural verb?In this meaning, membership is usually followed by a singular verb: · The membership supports the club’s decision.In British English, you can also use a plural verb: · The membership support the club’s decision.Grammar guide ‒ NOUNS3[countable, uncountable] the number of people who belong to a club, group, or organization:  We’re trying to increase our membership. The club has a membership of 200.COLLOCATIONSverbsapply for membership (=officially ask to be a member)· To apply for membership, simply return the attached form.renew your membership (=become a member again for another period of time)· Please renew your membership by January 15.terminate somebody’s membership (=stop someone being a member)· His membership was terminated for ‘unprofessional conduct’.be granted membership (=be accepted as a member)· Montenegro was granted membership of the UN in 2006.be refused membership (=not be accepted as a member)· She was refused membership of the club because she was a woman.somebody’s membership expires/lapses (=it comes to an end)· We will send you a letter when your membership is about to expire.ADJECTIVES/NOUN + membershipgym/union/party etc membership (=membership of a particular group)· How much do you pay for your gym membership?full membership (=with all the rights that are allowed to members)· Poland was eager to gain full membership in the European Union.associate membership (=with only some of the rights allowed to members)· In the early 1990s, the Soviet Union was offered associate membership of the International Monetary Fund.honorary membership (=having been given membership as an honor)· His work won him honorary membership of the London Medical Society.membership + NOUNmembership card· You will need a valid membership card to enter the Sports Centre.a membership fee (also membership dues) (=money you must pay to become a member)· The current annual membership fee is £20.
随便看

 

英语词典包含52748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:2025/1/11 20:49:45