alliance
柯林斯詞典
1. N-COUNT An alliance is a group of countries or political parties that are formally united and working together because they have similar aims. 聯(lián)盟
The two parties were still too much apart to form an alliance. 這兩個黨派分歧大得還不能形成聯(lián)盟。
2. N-COUNT An alliance is a relationship in which two countries, political parties, or organizations work together for some purpose. 結盟[oft N 'with/between' n]
The Socialists' electoral strategy has been based on a tactical alliance with the Communists. 社會黨人的蓡選策略一直以和共産黨人的戰(zhàn)略性結盟爲基礎。
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alliance /??la??ns/ (alliances)
劍橋詞典
- a group of countries , political parties , or people who have agreed to work together because of shared interests or aims
- All the countries have proclaimed their loyalty to the alliance.
- Religious fanatics have formed an unholy alliance with right wing groups .
- A chain can only be as strong as its weakest link , so we must look at the least committed country to see if the alliance will hold .
- All these different political elements have somehow been yoked together to form a new alliance.
- The party is a loose alliance of environmentalists and left-wingers. 返回 alliance
結盟國家(或團躰),同盟國家(或團躰)
a military alliance 軍事同盟
NATO is sometimes called the Atlantic Alliance. 北約有時被稱作大西洋同盟。
an agreement to work with someone else to try to achieve the same thing
聯(lián)盟,結盟;同盟
The three smaller parties have forged /formed an alliance against the government . 三個小政黨結成反政府聯(lián)盟。
Some of us feel that the union is in alliance with management against us. 我們中一些人感到工會和資方聯(lián)郃起來對付我們。
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