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单词 cabinet
释义

cabinet


cab·i·net

C0004400 (kăb′ə-nĭt)n.1. An upright, cupboardlike repository with shelves, drawers, or compartments for the safekeeping or display of objects.2. Computers The box that houses the main components of a computer, such as the central processing unit, disk drives, and expansion slots.3. often Cabinet A body of persons appointed by a head of state or a prime minister to head the executive departments of the government and to act as official advisers.4. Archaic A small or private room set aside for a specific activity.5. Rhode Island & Southeastern Massachusetts See milkshake.adj.1. Suitable for storage or display in a cabinet, as because of size or decorative quality.2. Of, relating to, or being a member of a governmental cabinet: cabinet matters; a cabinet minister.3. Used in the making of cabinets: teak and other heavy cabinet wood.
[French, partly from diminutive of Old North French cabine, gambling-room (perhaps alteration of Old French cabane, small house; see cabin) and partly from Italian gabinetto, closet, chest of drawers; akin to Old North French cabine. N., sense 5, possibly from the square wooden container in which the mixer was encased.]
cab′i·net·ful n.

cabinet

(ˈkæbɪnɪt) n1. (Furniture) a. a piece of furniture containing shelves, cupboards, or drawers for storage or displayb. (as modifier): cabinet teak. 2. (Furniture) the outer case of a television, radio, etc3. (Government, Politics & Diplomacy) a. (often capital) the executive and policy-making body of a country, consisting of all government ministers or just the senior ministersb. (sometimes capital) an advisory council to a president, sovereign, governor, etcc. (as modifier): a cabinet reshuffle; a cabinet minister. 4. (Printing, Lithography & Bookbinding) a. a standard size of paper, 6 × 4 inches (15 × 10 cm) or 6 × 4 inches (16.5 × 10.5 cm), for mounted photographsb. (as modifier): a cabinet photograph. 5. (Printing, Lithography & Bookbinding) printing an enclosed rack for holding cases of type, etc6. archaic a private room7. (modifier) suitable in size, value, decoration, etc, for a display cabinet: a cabinet edition of Shakespeare. 8. (Surveying) (modifier) (of a drawing or projection of a three-dimensional object) constructed with true horizontal and vertical representation of scale but with oblique distances reduced to about half scale to avoid the appearance of distortion9. (Brewing) (modifier) (of a wine) specially selected and usually rare[C16: from Old French, diminutive of cabine, of uncertain origin]

cab•i•net

(ˈkæb ə nɪt, ˈkæb nɪt)

n. 1. a piece of furniture with shelves, drawers, etc., for holding or displaying items: a file cabinet; a curio cabinet. 2. a wall cupboard used for storage, as of kitchen utensils or toilet articles. 3. the case enclosing a radio, television, loudspeaker, etc. 4. (often cap.) a council advising a sovereign or a chief executive; the group of persons who help to manage a government. 5. (often cap.) (in the U.S.) an advisory body to the president, consisting of the heads of the executive departments of the federal government. 6. a small case with compartments for valuables or other small objects. 7. Archaic. a small, private room. adj. 8. of or pertaining to a political cabinet: a cabinet meeting. 9. of, pertaining to, or used by a cabinetmaker or in cabinetmaking. [1540–50; < Middle French, derivative of cabine hut, room on a ship]

cabinet

- Originally meant a small room and came to apply to the group of politicians who met in the room.See also related terms for small room.

Cabinet

 a body of persons, usually a limited number, of the ministers of state of a country, 1630; a secret store-house, hence, its contents.Examples: cabinet of animal functions, 1667; of my secret thoughts, 1549; of his secret will, 1634.
Thesaurus
Noun1.cabinet - a piece of furniture resembling a cupboard with doors and shelves and drawerscabinet - a piece of furniture resembling a cupboard with doors and shelves and drawers; for storage or displaychina cabinet, china closet - a cabinet (usually with glass doors) for storing and displaying chinadresser - a cabinet with shelvesarticle of furniture, furniture, piece of furniture - furnishings that make a room or other area ready for occupancy; "they had too much furniture for the small apartment"; "there was only one piece of furniture in the room"medicine cabinet, medicine chest - cabinet that holds medicines and toiletriesshelf - a support that consists of a horizontal surface for holding objects
2.cabinet - persons appointed by a head of state to head executive departments of government and act as official adviserscabinet minister - the job of a senior minister who is a member of the cabinetadvisory board, planning board - a board appointed to advise the chief administratorBritish Cabinet - the senior ministers of the British governmentshadow cabinet - a group of senior members of the political party that is out of power; these members would probably assume corresponding positions as ministers in the British Cabinet if their party was electedUnited States Cabinet, US Cabinet - a board to advise the President; members are the secretaries of executive departments; the United States constitution does not provide for the cabinet
3.cabinet - a storage compartment for clothes and valuablescabinet - a storage compartment for clothes and valuables; usually it has a locklocker, storage lockercompartment - a partitioned section, chamber, or separate room within a larger enclosed areaglory hole, lazaretto - a small locker at the stern of a boat or between decks of a shiplocker room - a room (as at an athletic facility or workplace) where you can change clothes and which contains lockers for the temporary storage of your clothing and personal possessions
4.cabinet - housing for electronic instruments, as radio or televisionconsolehousing - a protective cover designed to contain or support a mechanical component

cabinet

noun1. cupboard, case, locker, dresser, closet, press, chiffonier a display cabinet with gleaming trophies2. (often cap.) council, committee, administration, ministry, assembly, board The radically-changed Cabinet of the Prime Minister includes eight new ministers see cupboards and cabinets
Translations
储藏柜内阁厨柜

cabinet

(ˈkӕbinit) noun1. a piece of furniture with shelves and doors or drawers. a filing cabinet. (有架子、門或抽屜的)櫃子 (有抽屉或格子的)厨柜 2. in Britain and some other countries the group of chief ministers who govern a country. The Prime Minister has chosen a new Cabinet. 內閣 内阁

cabinet

储藏柜zhCN
IdiomsSeekitchen cabinet

cabinet


cabinet,

group of advisers to the head of the state who themselves are usually the heads of the administrative government departments. The nature of the cabinet differs widely in various countries. In Great Britain, where the cabinet system originated, it was at first a committee of the privy council and rose to its modern status only after the sovereignty of ParliamentParliament,
legislative assembly of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland. Over the centuries it has become more than a legislative body; it is the sovereign power of Great Britain, whereas the monarch remains sovereign in name only.
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 had been established by the Glorious Revolution of 1688 and the gradual emergence of party government in the 18th cent. The British cabinet is a body of ministers drawn from the party that possesses a majority in the House of Commons; it is responsible to the Commons for the conduct of the administration. The cabinet is chosen by the prime ministerprime minister
or premier,
chief member of the cabinet in a parliamentary system of government. The prime minister is head of the government, in contrast with the head of state, who may be a constitutional monarch, as in Great Britain, or an elected official, as in the
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, who is guided by the necessity of choosing a group that will represent the disparate elements in his party. The defeat in the Commons of an important ministerial measure or a general election adverse to the government results in the fall of the cabinet. In continental European countries, where the two-party system is not the rule, the coalition cabinet is more common. Cabinet members need not be selected from the majority party nor necessarily from the legislature, and they may speak in either house of the legislature.

The U.S. cabinet was not specifically established by the Constitution; it evolved through custom and is now defined by statute law. The members of the cabinet are not members of either house of Congress and are responsible, individually and not as a body, to the president, who appoints them with the approval of the Senate and may remove them at will. The cabinet member may not address Congress but may be called as a witness before congressional committees. As an advisory body, the U.S. cabinet is generally a weak institution and is often overshadowed by a strong president and his staff. The first cabinet appointments (1789) were the secretaries of State, the Treasury, and War. Since then the size and composition of the cabinet has varied considerably. Presently the 15 executive departments whose heads sit in the cabinet are the departments of StateState, United States Department of,
executive department of the federal government responsible, under the President's direction, for the making and execution of American foreign policy.
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; the TreasuryTreasury, United States Department of the,
federal executive department established in 1789. It is charged with advising the president on fiscal policy and acting as fiscal agent for the federal government.
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; DefenseDefense, United States Department of,
executive department of the federal government charged with coordinating and supervising all agencies and functions of the government relating directly to national security and military affairs.
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; JusticeJustice, United States Department of,
federal executive department established in 1870 and charged with providing the means for enforcing federal laws, furnishing legal counsel in federal cases, and construing the laws under which other federal executive departments act.
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; the InteriorInterior, United States Department of the,
federal executive department established in 1849, delegated custodian of U.S. natural resources, and whose head, the Secretary of the Interior, has cabinet rank.
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; AgricultureAgriculture, United States Department of,
federal executive department established in 1862, whose head was made a cabinet member in 1889. The department administers federal programs related to food production and rural life.
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; CommerceCommerce, United States Department of,
federal executive department charged with promoting U.S. economic development and technological advancement. In Feb., 1903, the Congress established a Department of Commerce and Labor empowered to investigate and report upon the operations
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; LaborLabor, United States Department of,
federal executive department established in 1913 and charged with administering and enforcing statutes that promote the welfare of U.S. wage earners, improve their working conditions, and advance their opportunities for profitable employment.
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; Health and Human ServicesHealth and Human Services, United States Department of,
federal executive department charged with administering government health programs. Successor to the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, which had been created in 1953, it was redesignated in 1979 with the
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; Housing and Urban DevelopmentHousing and Urban Development, United States Department of
(HUD), established 1965 to coordinate and administer programs that provide assistance for housing and community development.
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; TransportationTransportation, United States Department of,
executive department of the U.S. government, established by the Department of Transportation Act of 1966. Its chief executive officer, the secretary, is a member of the president's cabinet.
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; EnergyEnergy, United States Department of,
executive department of the federal government responsible for coordinating national activities relating to the production, regulation, marketing, and conservation of energy.
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; EducationEducation, United States Department of,
executive department of the federal government responsible for advising on educational plans and policies, providing assistance for education, and carrying out educational research.
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; Veterans AffairsVeterans Affairs, United States Department of,
federal executive department established to operate programs to benefit veterans and their families. The department was established in 1989; its predecessor was an independent agency, the Veterans Administration, which had been
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; and Homeland Security.

Bibliography

See J. E. Cohen, The Politics of the U.S. Cabinet (1988).

Cabinet

A built-in or freestanding piece of furniture fitted with drawers and/or shelves, typically behind one or a pair of doors.
Bill Grant, director of the Findhorn Community in 1999. Courtesy Fortean Picture Library.

Cabinet

(religion, spiritualism, and occult)

The enclosed space in which a Spiritualist medium works is known as the cabinet. This can be anything from a carefully constructed wooden structure (as was used by the Davenport Brothers) to a simple curtained-off corner of a room. Most mediums favor the latter. According to mediums, the cabinet is necessary in order to condense the psychic energy needed for séance room manifestations. Hereward Carrington compared it to a battery cell that could be charged. The medium usually sits outside the cabinet, though some few do sit inside. The curtains may be dark or light in color; it seems to make no difference.

Some mediums, such as William Stainton Moses, and Daniel Dunglas Home, never used a cabinet. Eusapia Paladino was typical of those who, although they had a cabinet, sat outside it; about twelve inches away from the material of the cabinet. Materializations—such as a hand—emerged from the cabinet behind her. Sir Arthur Conan Doyle described the medium Eva C. using a cabinet that was “a small space shut in by curtains at the back and sides and top, but open in front.”

When Harry Houdini was investigating the medium Mina Crandon, he designed a special cabinet in which she could sit with only her head and hands visible. The second time this cabinet was used, Mina Crandon’s spirit guide, Walter, accused Houdini of placing incriminating evidence inside the cabinet, to be discovered after the séance. This was found to be a folding ruler. Houdini denied the charge and in turn accused Mina of planning to use the ruler to manipulate a small box. After Houdini’s death in 1926, an assistant of his confessed that he had placed the ruler there, on Houdini’s instructions.

The Davenport Brothers had a special cabinet made with three doors at the front and a bench inside, running the full length of the cabinet. The center door had a small diamond-shaped opening covered by a curtain, through which various phenomena could manifest. The Davenport Brothers performed at theaters and would allow audience members to examine the cabinet before the start of their performance. They would then sit astride the bench, facing one another, where they were securely tied so that they could not move. Within seconds of the doors being closed, rappings, musical sounds, and a wide variety of phenomena occurred. At the end of the show they were discovered still tightly bound.

Sources:

Doyle, Sir Arthur Conan: The History of Spiritualism. New York: Doran, 1926Shepard, Leslie A: Encyclopedia of Occultism & Parapsychology. New York: Avon Books, 1978Stemman, Roy: The Supernatural: Spirits and Spirit Worlds. London: Aldus, 1975

Cabinet

 

the official designation for the government in several foreign countries, including Great Britain, India, Zambia, Kenya, the United States, Tanzania, and Japan. It is headed by either a prime minister (Great Britain, India, and Japan) or a head of state, such as a president (USA, Zambia, Kenya, and Tanzania). In some countries, such as Great Britain and India, the cabinet does not include every member of the government; it consists only of the prime minister and the ministers heading the most important governmental offices (for example, the ministers of defense, foreign affairs, finance, and domestic affairs).

cabinet

1.A private room for study or conference. 2. A suite of rooms for exhibiting scientific and artistic curiosities. 3. A case or box-like assembly consisting of shelves, doors, and drawers and primarily used for storage. 4. An enclosure having a front hinged door or doors, for housing of electrical devices or conductor connections. 5. In French Vernacular architecture of Louisiana, one of two areas at the rear corners of a typical house; one was used for sleeping or storage, and the other used to house a stairwell.

cabinet

a. the executive and policy-making body of a country, consisting of all government ministers or just the senior ministers b. an advisory council to a president, sovereign, governor, etc. c. (as modifier): a cabinet reshuffle

Cabinet


Related to Cabinet: Cabinet Ministers

Cabinet

The counsel or group of advisers of a king or other chief executive of a government. A group of individuals who advise the president of the United States.

The president's cabinet was created by custom and tradition and was instituted by the first president. The heads of each of the executive departments of the government, including the Secretary of State, the secretary of the treasury, the secretary of defense, the attorney general, the secretary of the interior, the secretary of agriculture, the secretary of commerce, the secretary of labor, the secretary of health and human services, the secretary of education, the secretary of housing and urban development, and the secretary of transportation, comprise the cabinet.

Cross-references

Executive Branch.

Cabinet

in the constitutional law of the UK, as a result of various conventions, the executive part of the British government. Beginning as a group of special advisers to the crown, the lack of interest shown by monarchs in the 18th century meant that the Crown took little part in their deliberations. Parliament was concerned about this practice, and as early as the Act of Settlement of 1700 had tried to restrain the practice. Nonetheless, the Reform Act of 1832, extending the franchise, meant that the support of the House of Commons was ever more important. Accordingly, whoever had support there could have the direct link to the Crown, which was the essence of the Cabinet. The acceptance of the limited role of monarchy and the increase in representation have increased the status of the Cabinet so that it is now effectively the executive branch of government answerable to Parliament and requiring to legislate through Parliament with the Crown but in practical day-to-day matters being able to carry through all business subject to the duty of doing so in accordance with the policy of Parliament. It is entirely distinct from the Privy Council, whose meetings take precedence, but naturally many of the same individuals sit on both. Members of the Cabinet are usually ministers and are appointed by the Crown on the recommendation of the Prime Minister. There are usually about 20 members, and the existence of the Cabinet, although a matter of convention, has been noticed in legislation and judicial decision. It has a secretariat, and in modern times it keeps records, including minutes. Members subscribe to a doctrine of collective responsibility under which dissension in Cabinet is silenced after a decision, and all abide and promote that course. The Cabinet is responsible as a whole to Parliament under this doctrine.

CABINET. Certain officers who taken collectively make a board; as, the president's, cabinet, which is usually composed of the secretary of state, secretary of the treasury, the attorney general, and some others.
2. These officers are the advisers of the president.

AcronymsSeeCAB

cabinet


Related to cabinet: Cabinet Ministers
  • noun

Synonyms for cabinet

noun cupboard

Synonyms

  • cupboard
  • case
  • locker
  • dresser
  • closet
  • press
  • chiffonier

noun council

Synonyms

  • council
  • committee
  • administration
  • ministry
  • assembly
  • board

Synonyms for cabinet

noun a piece of furniture resembling a cupboard with doors and shelves and drawers

Related Words

  • china cabinet
  • china closet
  • dresser
  • article of furniture
  • furniture
  • piece of furniture
  • medicine cabinet
  • medicine chest
  • shelf

noun persons appointed by a head of state to head executive departments of government and act as official advisers

Related Words

  • cabinet minister
  • advisory board
  • planning board
  • British Cabinet
  • shadow cabinet
  • United States Cabinet
  • US Cabinet

noun a storage compartment for clothes and valuables

Synonyms

  • locker
  • storage locker

Related Words

  • compartment
  • glory hole
  • lazaretto
  • locker room

noun housing for electronic instruments, as radio or television

Synonyms

  • console

Related Words

  • housing
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