blacklist / ˈblækˌlɪst /

💦中学词汇黑名单黑名单上的人黑名单上黑名单上的

blacklist2 个定义

n. 名词 noun
  1. a list of persons under suspicion, disfavor, censure, etc.: His record as an anarchist put him on the government's blacklist.
  2. a list privately exchanged among employers, containing the names of persons to be barred from employment because of untrustworthiness or for holding opinions considered undesirable.
  3. a list drawn up by a labor union, containing the names of employers to be boycotted for unfair labor practices.
v. 有主动词 verb
  1. to put on a blacklist.

blacklist 近义词

v. 动词 verb

ban

更多blacklist例句

  1. It’s their current behaviors, too — including violent crackdowns of protests and door-to-door manhunts for people on their blacklist.
  2. The company said its inclusion on the blacklist will have a “major adverse impact” on advanced technology development.
  3. This law would also create a blacklist prohibiting foreign entities from receiving personal data from China.
  4. For example, the blacklist reserved for debt defaulters is overseen by China’s highest judicial authority, the Supreme People’s Court.
  5. The Blacklist does have one unqualified success this season: its extraordinary work in overhauling Keen.
  6. That was enough to keep Miller on the Stormfront blacklist since the founding of the site in 1995.
  7. It highlights the biggest problem with The Blacklist as the show barrels towards the conclusion of its debut season.
  8. On the drama side, James Spader breaks into the Best Actor category for his bravura scenery chewing on The Blacklist.
  9. For an anti-defamation league to put out a blacklist is to imply that those blacklisted are in the business of defamation.
  10. To attain their end these associations made liberal use of the lockout, the blacklist, and armed guards and detectives.
  11. Great Britain's regulations on the blacklist and "bunker coal" had intensified this feeling.
  12. But three more girls went down on the blacklist, and the plebes' triumph was yet greater.
  13. The purpose of the "blacklist" was to strike at neutral firms with German affiliations which were trading with Germany.
  14. I saw men who felt vexed at such an act as the blacklist, but that was merely vexation, not a fundamental change of feeling.