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词汇 prestige
释义 prestige
noun[ U ]
uk /presˈtiːʒ/ us /presˈtiːʒ/
C1
respect and admiration given to someone or something, usually because of a reputation for high quality, success, or social influence: 威信,声望;魅力
The company has gained international prestige.该公司赢得了国际声誉。
Many people are attracted by the prestige of working for a top company.在一家一流公司工作令人羡慕,很多人因此心向神往。
SMART Vocabulary: related words and phrases

Quality and standard
acid test
bar
benchmark
build
build quality
cachet
class
five-star
gilt-edged
ideal
level
litmus test
multi-levelled
quality control
random sampling
rate
set the bar high/lowidiom
starred
status
sub-level
prestige
adjective[ before noun ]
uk /presˈtiːʒ/ us /presˈtiːʒ/
causing admiration because of being connected with being rich or powerful: 有威望的,有威信的;令人羡慕的
a prestige address/car/job/label有威望的演说/名牌汽车/体面的工作/著名品牌
SMART Vocabulary: related words and phrases

Expensive & luxurious
be expensive to do
champagne
costliness
costly
expense
expensively
gold plate
grandly
lush
luxuriant
luxurious
luxury
palatially
plush
plushly
poshly
poshness
preciousness
ritzy
unaffordable

prestige | American Dictionary


prestige
noun[ U ]
us/presˈtiʒ, -ˈtidʒ/
respect and admiration given to someone or something, usually because of a reputation for high quality, success, or social influence:
No one would go into this sort of work for the prestige.

prestigious


adjectiveus/presˈtɪdʒ·əs/
a prestigious school

prestige | Business English


prestige
noun[ U ]
uk /presˈtiːʒ/us
respect or admiration that is given to someone or something, usually because of the reputation that they have for high quality, success, or social influence:
The company has gained international prestige in recent years.
the prestige of working for a top Wall Street firm
low/high prestigea gold credit card with high prestige
enjoy/gain prestigeMany of these companies enjoy prestige outside their own countries.
have/lack prestigeThe brand lacked prestige and had poor name recognition.
prestige
adjective[ before noun ]
uk /presˈtiːʒ/us
used to describe something that causes people to feel respect or admiration, for example because it is of high quality or connected with social success:
The company is a manufacturer of prestige products.

Examples of prestige


prestige
Elites obtain symbolic capital or social prestige through the associations.
Furthermore, there is a general perception that there is more prestige involved in treatment than in prevention.
Metaphors do not poverty make, but through cultural discourse practices are valorized, options legitimated and statuses lent prestige or disparagement.
For this it won international appreciation and prestige.
The colonel's prestige and influence within the military ascended accordingly.
As will become clear later, this means that artists and producers located in lower prestige groups were more reluctant to be interviewed.
I also asked them to rate artists on a prestige scale from 1 to 10 according to the respect they personally felt for their work.
To summarise, songwriters generally have more prestige than interpreters, but prestige is above all a function of where artists are located in the field.
As a result, the regression equation may underestimate the relationship between success and prestige among older artists.
They described artists with low prestige as 'useless', arguing that they 'could have never existed and it would not have changed anything about anything'.
They associated prestige with artists who were 'real stars', who were recognised on the street, who were talked about.
In spatial terms, districts were informal clusters of villages within a loosely defined geographical area whose inhabitants practiced intermarriage and exchanged trade and prestige goods.
Instead, the concept of three ' sorts of people ' expressed a rudimentary perception of broad, rough-edged affinities between occupations of similar wealth, administrative power, and prestige.
Similar to the figures, height has little impact on prestige; rather, status is expressed in vertical placement.
As noted, the latter groups tend to be placed in positions of lesser prestige within relief sculptures and in architectural space.
See all examples of prestige
These examples are from corpora and from sources on the web. Any opinions in the examples do not represent the opinion of the Cambridge Dictionary editors or of Cambridge University Press or its licensors.
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