tendentious
tendentious 英 [tenˈdenʃəs] 美 [tɛnˈdɛnʃəs]
adj. 有偏见的,有倾向的;宣传性的
- If you are writing a report on climate change and you ignore evidence that the earth is warming, the paper might be called tendentious. Tendentious means promoting a specific, and controversial, point of view.
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- adj. 有偏见的,有倾向的;宣传性的
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1. When this suggestion first surfaced, in a tendentious 1991 biography by Bruce Perry, the criticism was huge, but Marable insists that the evidence is now more compelling.
这种说法第一次在布鲁斯·佩里1991年出版的一本有倾向性的传记中出现时,批评如潮,但是马拉贝坚持认为现在证据更加确凿。
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2. Gaskell, for example, and other such novels become tendentious, and the place and role of women becomes the dominant theme of novels of this kind.
的近期作品和类似的小说都变得有主观色彩了,而女人的角色和地位,变成了小说内部的事。
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3. By “not free of errors” I do not refer to tendentious anti-nuclear journalism – that is quite normal these days.
说“有错”并不代表我是偏见的反核能源新闻从事者——虽然这在当今很常见了。
- tendentious (adj.) "having a definite purpose," 1871, formed after or from German tendenziös, from Tendenz "tendency," from Medieval Latin tendentia (see tendency).
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