释义 |
Definition of conservatism in English: conservatismnoun kənˈsəːvətɪz(ə)mkənˈsərvədɪzəm mass noun1Commitment to traditional values and ideas with opposition to change or innovation. proponents of theological conservatism Example sentencesExamples - Insecurity is the basis of our conservatism.
- Even the war films that do not make use of these stereotypes are, for the most part, possessed of an inherent conservatism.
- This perception is rent by contradictions between assimilation and separation, conservatism and liberalism, and tradition and progression.
- There is this conservatism, this lack of understanding, this ignorance.
- Economics risks suffocating architecture, but so does polite conservatism and a consumerist attitude.
- I think it says something about the conservatism of Australian producers.
- This is a fable that talks about the existence and acceptance of differences in a time of conservatism and religious bigotry.
- Like Nabokov, whose family was similarly fallen, he displayed a complex mix of elite liberalism and disdainful conservatism.
- The dichotomy stems from his musical conservatism.
- Its conservatism led patrons of modern art to look for alternatives.
2The holding of political views that favour free enterprise, private ownership, and socially conservative ideas. a party that espoused conservatism Example sentencesExamples - Critical perspectives on economics are key to countering the rise of political conservatism on campuses.
- The political history of Portugal in the 20th century has done much to reinforce a deeply entrenched conservatism.
- The conservative traditions that have been the cement of the social capital of rural communities have underpinned the political conservatism of rural Australia.
- It was a carefully choreographed convention, one that strived to put distance between the harsh, ideological brand of conservatism practiced by the party's old guard.
- He goes on to argue that the "new conservatism is being put into place through cultural rather than political strategies."
- Amid the urban riots, campus unrest, economic strains, and Vietnam War controversies of the late 1960s, Republican conservatism revived.
- All energy was put into judicial censoring action, finding allies within the Right, thereby showing a vehement conservatism within feminism.
- Democrats scoffed at the Republican mantra of "compassionate conservatism" that will provide little more than empty rhetoric.
- He himself describes his political views as a "Machiavellian brand of conservatism."
- The hallmark of this transition has been his decisive action installing an administration that is long on experience and generally high on conservatism.
- 2.1 The doctrines of the Conservative Party of Great Britain or a similar party elsewhere.
the thrust of post-war Conservatism Example sentencesExamples - That capture of a weakened Labour machine by the Left would not suffice to defeat the new Conservatism.
- They gave Chamberlainite managerial Conservatism a broad support.
- He claimed that during the previous 20 years, the Conservatives had emphasized the strong features of Conservatism.
- The essays on Australian Conservatism provided some insight into conservative ideology and organization between the world wars.
- The college became a bastion of Conservatism in the Thatcher Era.
- A Conservative MP, he maintained in the 1920s that Conservatism was "above all things a spirit, not an abstract doctrine."
- He does not radiate the same enjoyment in scoring off the prime minister as he did when his main targets were the Crown and Conservatism.
- Conservatism revived with the dual leadership of Bentinck and Disraeli.
- For Major, Conservatism is about allowing people to fulfill their potential.
- Whereas his predecessor sought to dominate her party, he hoped to heal divisions and to create a new, consensual form of Conservatism.
Definition of conservatism in US English: conservatismnounkənˈsərvədɪzəmkənˈsərvədizəm 1Commitment to traditional values and ideas with opposition to change or innovation. proponents of theological conservatism Example sentencesExamples - There is this conservatism, this lack of understanding, this ignorance.
- This is a fable that talks about the existence and acceptance of differences in a time of conservatism and religious bigotry.
- I think it says something about the conservatism of Australian producers.
- Even the war films that do not make use of these stereotypes are, for the most part, possessed of an inherent conservatism.
- This perception is rent by contradictions between assimilation and separation, conservatism and liberalism, and tradition and progression.
- The dichotomy stems from his musical conservatism.
- Its conservatism led patrons of modern art to look for alternatives.
- Like Nabokov, whose family was similarly fallen, he displayed a complex mix of elite liberalism and disdainful conservatism.
- Insecurity is the basis of our conservatism.
- Economics risks suffocating architecture, but so does polite conservatism and a consumerist attitude.
2The holding of political views that favor free enterprise, private ownership, and socially conservative ideas. a party that espoused conservatism Example sentencesExamples - Amid the urban riots, campus unrest, economic strains, and Vietnam War controversies of the late 1960s, Republican conservatism revived.
- All energy was put into judicial censoring action, finding allies within the Right, thereby showing a vehement conservatism within feminism.
- He himself describes his political views as a "Machiavellian brand of conservatism."
- It was a carefully choreographed convention, one that strived to put distance between the harsh, ideological brand of conservatism practiced by the party's old guard.
- The conservative traditions that have been the cement of the social capital of rural communities have underpinned the political conservatism of rural Australia.
- Democrats scoffed at the Republican mantra of "compassionate conservatism" that will provide little more than empty rhetoric.
- The political history of Portugal in the 20th century has done much to reinforce a deeply entrenched conservatism.
- Critical perspectives on economics are key to countering the rise of political conservatism on campuses.
- He goes on to argue that the "new conservatism is being put into place through cultural rather than political strategies."
- The hallmark of this transition has been his decisive action installing an administration that is long on experience and generally high on conservatism.
- 2.1 The doctrines of the Conservative Party of Great Britain or a similar party elsewhere.
the thrust of post-war Conservatism Example sentencesExamples - A Conservative MP, he maintained in the 1920s that Conservatism was "above all things a spirit, not an abstract doctrine."
- He claimed that during the previous 20 years, the Conservatives had emphasized the strong features of Conservatism.
- Whereas his predecessor sought to dominate her party, he hoped to heal divisions and to create a new, consensual form of Conservatism.
- That capture of a weakened Labour machine by the Left would not suffice to defeat the new Conservatism.
- For Major, Conservatism is about allowing people to fulfill their potential.
- He does not radiate the same enjoyment in scoring off the prime minister as he did when his main targets were the Crown and Conservatism.
- The college became a bastion of Conservatism in the Thatcher Era.
- They gave Chamberlainite managerial Conservatism a broad support.
- Conservatism revived with the dual leadership of Bentinck and Disraeli.
- The essays on Australian Conservatism provided some insight into conservative ideology and organization between the world wars.
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