marginalise

marginalise

美 ['mɑ:dʒɪnəlaɪz]  英 ['mɑ:dʒɪnəlaɪz]

  • v.使显得微不足道;使处于边缘;使无实权
  • 网络边缘化

例句

Should such a vision prevail, Japan would almost certainly marginalise itself from the global scene.

如果看法占据上风日本几乎肯定自己全球舞台边缘

He doesn't, of course, want the "gay writer" tag to be turned against him, to be an excuse to marginalise his work.

当然希望同性恋作家标签使受到非议不想他人作品边缘

Mr Cameron and Mr Clegg have struggled to marginalise their parties' loonier fringes, and their alliance may assist them in that task.

卡梅伦克莱格已经努力淡化他们党派界限他们联合可能有助于他们实现目的

The term disruptive technology describes products or processes that marginalise older technologies .

干扰科技一代科技边缘产品过程

It should be a fundamental objective of policy to marginalise nuclear weapons.

核武器边缘成为项根本政策目标

But BlackRock insists that the plan is not meant to marginalise Wall Street.

不过贝莱德坚称计划目的不是为了边缘华尔街

If you put a deadline on the naming rights, then you start to marginalise the deal.

如果事儿一个具体期限那么不得不马上交易

It was once regarded as axiomatic that globalisation would marginalise politics.

全球化使政治边缘过去当作真理

We know breastfeeding is good for women and children, but we also don't want to marginalise women who can't breastfeed for whatever reason.

我们知道母乳喂养妇女孩子益处但是我们并不排斥那些各种缘由不能母乳喂养妇女