centrist
含义: Holding moderate political views that occupy the middle ground between left and right; favouring pragmatic, incremental reform over radical ideological positions.
Centrist describes politicians, parties, or policies that reject the extremes of the political spectrum. Depending on the speaker's perspective, the label can be complimentary (pragmatic, balanced) or dismissive (lacking conviction, fence-sitting). In British politics, figures such as Tony Blair and the Liberal Democrats have been characterised as centrist. The term is widely used in political commentary and polling analysis. It collocates with 'centrist position,' 'centrist party,' 'centrist voter,' and 'centrist coalition.'
例句
- The party repositioned itself on centrist ground in an attempt to attract swing voters in marginal constituencies. 该党将自身重新定位于中间立场,试图在边缘选区吸引摇摆选民。El partido se reposicionó en el centro para intentar atraer votantes indecisos en circunscripciones marginales.同党は、接戦選挙区の浮動票を引きつけるために中道路線に方針を転換した。그 정당은 접전 선거구의 부동층 유권자를 끌어들이기 위해 중도 노선으로 입장을 재정립했다.
- Polling suggested that a centrist candidate would perform better against the populist challenger than either a left-wing or right-wing alternative. 民意调查显示,在面对民粹主义挑战者时,中间派候选人的表现将优于左翼或右翼的替代方案。Las encuestas indicaban que un candidato centrista obtendría mejores resultados frente al rival populista que cualquier alternativa de izquierda o derecha.世論調査は、ポピュリスト候補者に対しては左派や右派の選択肢よりも中道候補者の方が好成績を収めることを示唆していた。여론조사에 따르면 포퓰리스트 후보에 대해서는 좌파나 우파 후보보다 중도 후보가 더 좋은 성적을 거둘 것으로 나타났다.
- His centrist politics frustrated ideologues on both sides, who accused him of standing for nothing more than electoral convenience. 他的中间路线政治令双方的意识形态拥趸都感到沮丧,他们指责他除了选举便利之外别无所长。Su política centrista frustraba a los ideólogos de ambos bandos, que lo acusaban de no defender nada más que la conveniencia electoral.彼の中道的政治は両サイドのイデオロギー信奉者を苛立たせ、彼らは彼が選挙上の都合以上のものを何も代表していないと非難した。그의 중도적 정치는 양쪽의 이념적 신봉자들을 분노하게 했으며, 그들은 그가 선거상의 편의 이상의 아무것도 대변하지 않는다고 비난했다.
发音
用法指南
语境: political, academic, media
语气: neutral
起源与历史
From French centriste, from centre, from Latin centrum meaning 'the fixed point of a compass,' from Greek kentron (sharp point, centre). The political sense arose in post-revolutionary France to describe deputies seated in the centre of the legislative chamber.
文化背景
Era: Modern
Generation: All ages
Social background: Universal
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