enfranchised

英 [ɪnˈfræntʃaɪzd] 美 [ɪnˈfræntʃaɪzd]

v.  给(某人)选举权
enfranchise的过去分词和过去式

过去分词:enfranchised

BNC.40515 / COCA.44690



柯林斯词典

  1. VERB 给予…选举权
    To enfranchise someone means to give them the right to vote in elections.
    1. The company voted to enfranchise its 120 women members...
      公司投票决定给予其120名女职员选举权。
    2. If the city's foreign residents are enfranchised, they won't be able to vote until 1996.
      如果该市的外国居民获得选举权,他们要到1996年才能投票。

双语例句

  1. If the city's foreign residents are enfranchised, they won't be able to vote until 1996.
    如果该市的外国居民获得选举权,他们要到1996年才能投票。
  2. Mohammed told his wife that he had no enmity for the country that had just enfranchised him with citizenship.
    穆罕默德对妻子说他对刚授予他公民权的国家毫无敌意。
  3. The newly enfranchised majority has decided to formulate law on the same principle of legal plunder that was used by their predecessors when the vote was limited.
    当投票受到限制时,新掌权的多数派已经决定按照他们前任曾使用的合法掠夺的同一原理制定法律体系。
  4. It seemed to me that he found it difficult fully to understand why, in a country where workers were enfranchised, there was still no workers'government.
    他似乎觉得很难理解,像英国那样工人有参政权的国家,为什么仍没有一个工人的政府。
  5. In Britain women were enfranchised in 1918.
    1918年英国妇女获得议会选举权。
  6. Countries, 30 languagesUnexpected users from everywhere are enfranchised into the world of technology.
    在任何一个角落,连你想象不到的那些人们也被解放到科技的世界里来了。
  7. Compulsory voting ( CV) is a system of laws and/ or norms mandating that enfranchised citizens turn out to vote.
    强制投票是一项旨在命令有选举权的公民参加投票的法律或者规范制度。
  8. Slaves were enfranchised in the mid-19th century.
    十九世纪中期奴隶们都恢复了自由。
  9. Here, three women, newly enfranchised to vote, cast their ballots in New York in1917.
    图为刚刚获得选举权的3名妇女1917年在纽约投票。

英英释义

adj

  1. endowed with the rights of citizenship especially the right to vote