中英文地名和人名建议选择专门化的地名译典或人名译典;有些缩写词在缩写词典中更容易查到;

    liberalisms查询结果如下:

    音标:['lɪbərəlɪzəm]
    名词同根词 :liberalist 形容词同根词 :liberalistic
    名词复数:liberalisms 词频:低频词
    基本释义/说明: 查询词liberalismsliberalism的名词复数()
    详解 英文释义 韦氏词典 英文百科 wiki词典 英文句库 通译比典
    名词
    1. 自由主义,2. 宽容;开明
    -liberalisms的不同词性形态

    形容词 变体/同根词

    Of or pertaining to liberalism
    The main plank in the program is to abolish the liberalistic concept of the individual.
    Such economic goals tend to go hand in hand with liberalistic social goals.
    This is a conception that also can be found in liberalistic theories.
    that destroys liberty
    They claim that a party has the right to participate fully in political life even if it is avowedly and openly liberticidal.
    Relating to, or causing, liberation; freeing.
    While from the standpoint of what precedes it is a fulfilment, it is a liberative expansion with respect to what comes after.
    And indeed even Janzen had momentarily shaken him by his fierce confidence in the theory of liberative Individualism.
    The priests want Paris to repent and do penitence for its liberative work of truth and justice.
    Dissolute, licentious, profligate; loose in morals.
    She’s pretty, clean, and libertine - everything you could ever want in a French woman.
    Having the beliefs of libertarians; having a relative tendency towards liberty. || (dated) Relating to liberty, or to the doctrine of free will, as opposed to the doctrine of necessity.
    The town’s political climate was libertarian.

    名词 变体/同根词

    动词 变体/同根词

    (transitive) to make liberal, free. || (intransitive) to become liberal, free.
    He introduced many new reforms which attempted to modernize and liberalize the system rather than destroy it.
    Johnston predicts that Japan will be compelled to liberalize its strict immigration policies.
    Even before the war, the movement to liberalize world trade further had stalled.
    (transitive) To set free, to make or allow to be free, particularly || To release from slavery: to manumit. || To release from servitude or unjust rule. || To release from restraint or inhibition. || (chemistry) To release from chemical bonds or solutions. || (transitive, military, euphemistic) To acquire from an enemy during wartime, used especially of cities, regions, and other population centers. || (transitive, euphemistic) To acquire from another by theft or force: to steal, to rob.
    She was liberated in 1945 and trekked back to Poland, still cold and starving but with a one-way ticket to Warsaw.
    That process would briefly liberate the quarks and gluons that make up protons and neutrons.
    This journey made him the exporter of revolution to liberate Latin America’s poor.
    简典