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antiwar

/an-tee-wawr, an-tahy-/US // ˌæn tiˈwɔr, ˌæn taɪ- //UK // (ˌæntɪˈwɔː) //

反战,反战争,反戰,抗战

Definitions

adj.形容词 adjective
  1. 1
    • : against war or a particular war: the antiwar movement of the 1960s.

Examples

  • Viewed from 20 years out, these antiwar arguments foretold much of the mess in Afghanistan.

  • In his first presidential race, he traded on his antiwar credentials to shore up celebrity endorsements and a loyal grass-roots base of support.

  • Franks, who had helped launch a chapter of Students for a Democratic Society while at Vassar College, often returned to stories about the antiwar movement and the legacy of 1960s radicalism.

  • Repealing the AUMF is not necessarily a pro or antiwar position.

  • It caused a big split in our family because I was very antiwar.

  • Rep. Walter Jones, an antiwar Republican, was one of the few to give voice to the problem.

  • Soldiers in uniform have been holding antiwar signs in front of their faces and posting the pictures to Reddit.

  • Todd Kincannon, a former executive director of the South Carolina GOP, says he wishes the Iraqis had killed an antiwar veteran.

  • This criticism of the President from an antiwar position elicited cheers from the Republican delegates.

  • To stop antiwar demonstrators from nearing the RNC, police set up barricades of buses.

  • The movement was headed by the left-wing Socialists, who attempted to correlate the antiwar movement with socialist propaganda.

  • The antiwar factions were not necessarily, however, users of violence.

  • (p. 135) Kerensky, undoubtedly, knew of the growing antiwar sentiment in the rank and file of the army.

  • These dire conditions gave a strong impetus to the growing antiwar movement in the country.