词汇 | privileged |
释义 | privileged adjective uk /ˈprɪv.əl.ɪdʒd/ us /ˈprɪv.əl.ɪdʒd/ C1 having a privilege: 享有特权的;特许的 As an ambassador, she enjoys a very privileged status.作为大使,她享有特权地位。 [ + to infinitive ]I have been privileged to work with the pioneers of silicon technology.我有幸和硅工业技术的先驱者一起工作。 law specialized Priviledged information is secret and does not have to be given even in a law court.(信息)特许保密的 Advantage and disadvantage ace an ace up your sleeveidiom attraction be well in thereidiom be/stay/keep one jump aheadidiom have it both waysidiom have something on your sideidiom have the inside trackidiom have the odds/cards stacked against youidiom head start leg lock milk profit from something racing start saving grace scent bloodidiom secret weapon stick the best of both worldsidiom You can also find related words, phrases, and synonyms in the topics: Secrecy and privacy privileged | American Dictionaryprivileged adjective[ not gradable ] us/ˈprɪv·ə·lɪdʒd/ having or showing a special advantage: As an old friend of the president, he enjoys privileged status. law Information that is privileged is secret: A person’s medical history is privileged information. privileged | Business Englishprivileged adjective uk /ˈprɪvəlɪdʒd/us having special rights or advantages that only a small number of people have: Shareholders may have privileged access to important information. Those joining the privileged few at the top of the firm have been responsible for some of the company's greatest successes. be/feel privileged to do/have done sthI feel privileged to have had such a long and interesting career. a privileged position/background/upbringing Examples of privilegedprivileged In these circumstances, it is difficult to maintain that the intersection rate is in some way privileged by virtue of its construction. Reference to a 'liberation fund' highlights the (relatively) privileged position of the coffee workers on the city's waterfront. The use of agreements in central-local government relations indicates a privileged position for the local government associations in the decision-making process. Small groups of exploitive agents, even when privileged, have little success in taking advantage of, much less destroying, communities of co-operative agents. In almost every debate, impressions are privileged over substance. There is the imperial memoir, getting within the framework of one volume privileged and influential overseas experience at innumerable sites. Tribalism thus has come to be synonymous with a system of wasta-privileged access to the system of patron-clientelism fostered by the state. The important realms of the mind and culture are too privileged by histories that become ' thick descriptions ' or retrievals of a discourse. Second, civil affairs departments could ask for material investment or privileged policies at local levels on behalf of 'community services'. Both examples suggest a culturalpolitical logic - unwritten, fluid, but influential - which leaves some indigenous organisations privileged and others all but excluded. The author was not only a privileged observer but also a secondary actor in the events of 1965 which sharpened the profile of this dispute. Instead, they use their privileged access to the administration to lobby ministers to deliver local public goods to their constituencies. The state conferred upon a privileged few the right to unilaterally set prices, regulate output and exclude competitors from the market. When the use of names in meaningful propositions is emphasized, there is no longer need for a privileged process of thinking. However, mid vowels which are non-initial are not permitted in surface forms unless they share height features with a vowel in the privileged initial syllable. See all examples of privileged 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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