barbarism
barbarism 英 [ˈbɑ:bərɪzəm] 美 [ˈbɑrbərɪzəm]
n. 野蛮;原始;未开化;暴虐
名词复数:barbarisms
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- n. 野蛮;原始;未开化;暴虐
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1. But if you want to feel the heat and stink of war, to know how desperation kindles gallantry and barbarism, see Black Hawk Down.
然而,如果你想要体验一下战争的火药味儿,想要了解绝望是如何激起勇气与野蛮之力的话,那一定要去看看《黑鹰计划》这部电影。
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2. Marx, as we have seen , did indeed believein progress and civilisation; but he considered that, so far at least, they hadproved inseparable from barbarism and benightedness.
马克思,正如我们所知道的,非常确信进步和文明,但是他认为,至少到目前为止,它们已经被证明与野蛮和愚昧如影随形。
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3. But I was told to read it on the spot and it was grabbed away as soon as I had reached the last line… How can any honest and intelligent person justify the barbarism?
但他们却要我当场读完。 当我刚读到最后一行的时候,信就被拽走了……没有任何诚实和有智力的人会为如此野蛮的行为而辩护的!
- barbarism (n.) mid-15c., "uncivilized or rude nature, ignorance or want of culture," from French barbarisme "barbarism of language" (13c.), from Latin barbarismus, from Greek barbarismos "foreign speech," from barbarizein "to do as a foreigner does," from barbaros (see barbarian (n.)). Only of speech in Greek, Latin, and French; sense extension to "uncivilized condition" is in English. In English from 1570s as "offense against purity or style of language" (originally the use of foreign words in Latin and Greek); sense of "an expression or word not in accord with the proper usage of a language" is from 1580s.
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