释义 |
Definition of Blairite in English: Blairitenoun ˈblɛːrʌɪt A supporter of the former British Prime Minister Tony Blair or his policies. Example sentencesExamples - Some Blairites are in despair, arguing people around the chancellor have got a victim complex.
- Interestingly, the Blairites were not among the book's cheerleaders.
- For a Labour MP to be called a Blairite today means little in ideological terms.
- He claims he has been "a Blairite before Blair was ever heard of."
- Such calls for a clear definition of Labour values contrasted with comments from some Blairites at the meeting.
- Some think he should challenge Brown to give Blairites a political bargaining chip.
- Senior Blairites are beginning to press the case for either the Health Secretary or the Education Secretary.
- The editor says, perhaps with some poetic exaggeration, that he was the first and is now the last Blairite in Italy.
- She was joined by a loyal Blairite who had a niece about to go to university.
- Long interested in politics and a staunch Blairite and county councillor, she won the newly created seat in 1997.
adjective ˈblɛːrʌɪt Relating to or characteristic of the former British Prime Minister Tony Blair or his policies. figures from a Blairite think tank Example sentencesExamples - You can see why this kind of accounting does not appeal to the Blairite circle.
- In the capital, the old Blairite stamping ground of Islington even began to return to the fold.
- She made the journey across the social democratic spectrum and is now embedded in the Blairite project.
- Once again, there is the enduring Blairite faith in the magic of the private sector.
- The cheers today should be checked with a dose of Blairite humility.
- The Blairite essence is there in the speech, say the party's centrists.
- Then councils could have upper chambers with locally ennobled Blairite members, an appointed gentry.
- The play is about a Blairite cabinet minister whose father is an old engineering trade unionist.
- What works is best, the Blairite argument goes.
- In accepting a portfolio, he was effectively condoning the Blairite view of electoral reform.
Definition of Blairite in US English: Blairitenounˈblerītˈblɛraɪt A supporter of the former British Prime Minister Tony Blair or his policies. Example sentencesExamples - He claims he has been "a Blairite before Blair was ever heard of."
- Some Blairites are in despair, arguing people around the chancellor have got a victim complex.
- She was joined by a loyal Blairite who had a niece about to go to university.
- Some think he should challenge Brown to give Blairites a political bargaining chip.
- For a Labour MP to be called a Blairite today means little in ideological terms.
- Such calls for a clear definition of Labour values contrasted with comments from some Blairites at the meeting.
- Interestingly, the Blairites were not among the book's cheerleaders.
- The editor says, perhaps with some poetic exaggeration, that he was the first and is now the last Blairite in Italy.
- Senior Blairites are beginning to press the case for either the Health Secretary or the Education Secretary.
- Long interested in politics and a staunch Blairite and county councillor, she won the newly created seat in 1997.
adjectiveˈblerītˈblɛraɪt Relating to or characteristic of the former British Prime Minister Tony Blair or his policies. figures from a Blairite think tank Example sentencesExamples - The play is about a Blairite cabinet minister whose father is an old engineering trade unionist.
- In accepting a portfolio, he was effectively condoning the Blairite view of electoral reform.
- The cheers today should be checked with a dose of Blairite humility.
- In the capital, the old Blairite stamping ground of Islington even began to return to the fold.
- The Blairite essence is there in the speech, say the party's centrists.
- You can see why this kind of accounting does not appeal to the Blairite circle.
- What works is best, the Blairite argument goes.
- She made the journey across the social democratic spectrum and is now embedded in the Blairite project.
- Once again, there is the enduring Blairite faith in the magic of the private sector.
- Then councils could have upper chambers with locally ennobled Blairite members, an appointed gentry.
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