ostracizing

英 [ˈɒstrəsaɪzɪŋ] 美 [ˈɑːstrəsaɪzɪŋ]

v.  排挤; 排斥
ostracize的现在分词



柯林斯词典

    in BRIT, also use 英国英语亦用 ostracise

  1. VERB 排斥;排挤
    If someone is ostracized, people deliberately behave in an unfriendly way towards them and do not allow them to take part in any of their social activities.
    1. She claims she's being ostracized by some members of her local community.
      她声称受到当地社区一些人的排挤。

双语例句

  1. Being a social ostracizing force, education has gradually come into being during different historical periods, and compared with other social ostracizing, it has a greater degree of social openness.
    教育作为一种社会排斥的力量,是在不同的在历史时期逐渐发展起来的,它与以往的社会排斥相比,具有更高的社会开放性程度。
  2. The obvious answer is the language barrier, which results in Chinese students keeping silent in the classroom, and ostracizing themselves from campus life.
    不言自明的是语言障碍,它使得中国学生在教室里总是沉默不语,这也把他们自己斥于校园生活之外。
  3. Due to complicated historical ties and geopolitical interests, the entry of Central and East European countries is bound to bring in anti-Russian feelings so that the two organizations will invisibly strengthen their trend of ostracizing Russia, and Russia will encounter new barriers in its return to Europe.
    由于历史复杂关系和地缘政治利益,一些中东欧国家的加入肯定携带进反俄情绪并使得两个组织无形之中强化排斥俄罗斯的倾向,俄罗斯回归欧洲遇到新的困扰。
  4. To identify his identity as an American, he oppugns the mainstream of American society for their bias and ostracizing attitude towards the orient.
    在确认自身的美国人身份时,他对美国主流社会对东方文化和东方人存在的偏见与排斥提出了质疑。