blatant

导读:blatant怎么读
英式音标:[ˈbleɪtnt] 美式音标:[ˈbleɪtnt]
blatant基本解释 adj. 喧嚣的;公然的;炫耀的;俗丽的 blatant的意思释义 adj.公然的;明目张胆的;露骨的;英英释义 blat

blatant怎么读

英式音标:[ˈbleɪtnt]

美式音标:[ˈbleɪtnt]

blatant基本解释

adj. 喧嚣的;公然的;炫耀的;俗丽的

blatant的意思释义

adj.

公然的;明目张胆的;露骨的;

英英释义

blatant[ \'bleitənt ]

adj.

without any attempt at concealment; completely obvious

\"blatant disregard of the law\"; \"a blatant appeal to vanity\"

同义词:blazingconspicuous

conspicuously and offensively loud; given to vehement outcry

\"blatant radios\"

同义词:clamantclamorousstridentvociferous

blatant用法及例句

双语例句

用作形容词(adj.)

I have never encountered such blatant disregard for the Bill of Rights .

我从来没有见过这种明目张胆践踏人权法案的现象。

Our teacher is guilty of blatant favouritism.

我们老师有明显的偏心错误。

You don\'t have to be blatant about it.

你不必为这事吵吵嚷嚷。

例句参考

Subtle and blatant prejudice in western Europe

The impact of blatant stereotype activation and group sex-composition on female leaders

Blatant benevolence and conspicuous consumption: when romantic motives elicit strategic costly signals.

Blatant and subtle prejudice: dimensions, determinants, and consequences; some comments on Pettigrew and Meertens

Evidence that blatant versus subtle stereotype threat cues impact performance through dual processes

Blatant Stereotype Threat and Women\'s Math Performance: Self-Handicapping as a Strategic Means to Cope with Obtrusive Negative Perfo...

Inter-ethnic contact as a predictor of blatant and subtle prejudice: Tests of a model in four West European nations.

From flawed self‐assessment to blatant whoppers: the utility of voluntary and involuntary behavior in detecting deception

The Explicit and Implicit Perception of In-Group Members Who Use Stereotypes: Blatant Rejection but Subtle Conformity

Ethnic identity moderates perceptions of prejudice: Judgments of personal versus group discrimination and subtle versus blatant bias.

blatant词源

blatant

blatant: [16] Blatant appears to have been coined, or at least introduced, by the poet Edmund Spenser. In the Faerie Queene 1596 he describes how ‘unto themselves they [Envy and Detraction] gotten had a monster which the blatant beast men call, a dreadful fiend of gods and men ydrad [dreaded]’. This ‘blatant beast’ was an allegorical representation of calumny. In the 17th century the word came to be applied to offensively voluble people, but the main modern sense, ‘offensively conspicuous’, does not seem to have developed until the late 19th century.If the word was Spenser’s own introduction, it is not clear where he got it from. The likeliest candidate seems to be Latin blatīre ‘babble, gossip’, of imitative origin.

blatant (adj.)

1596, in blatant beast, coined by Edmund Spenser in \"The Faerie Queen\" to describe a thousand-tongued monster representing slander; probably suggested by Latin blatire \"to babble.\" It entered general use 1650s, as \"noisy in an offensive and vulgar way;\" the sense of \"obvious, glaringly conspicuous\" is from 1889. Related: Blatantly.

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