释义 |
com·mon·wealth \ˈkämənˌwelth, | ̷ ̷ ̷ ̷ˈ ̷ ̷\ noun (-s) Etymology: Middle English commen wealthe, from commen, commun common + wealthe, welthe wealth (well-being) 1. : public welfare : wealth held in common 2. a. : a whole body of people united by common consent to form a nation, state, or politically organized community b. : a state especially conceived as a body politic founded on law and united by compact or by tacit agreement of the people for the common good c. : a state in which the supreme power resides with the people and their representatives : republic < the commonwealth established in England under Oliver Cromwell > 3. a. : a state of the U.S. < commonwealths joining the Union after the Civil War > — used in the official designations of Kentucky, Massachusetts, Pennsylvania, and Virginia in preference to the word state b. : a self-governing autonomous state; usually : a former colony that is associated by treaty or agreement in a loose political federation with a mother country or former colonial power < Commonwealth of Australia > c. : an association of self-governing autonomous states united by a common allegiance to a mother country and forming by treaty or agreement a loose confederation having a somewhat common political and cultural background < a commonwealth of nations > < the British Commonwealth > 4. a. : a group of persons conceived of as united by common interests < the commonwealth of artists or of literary men > b. : the range of interests uniting such a group < the commonwealth of learning > |