collude 的定义
col·lud·ed, col·lud·ing.
- to act together through a secret understanding, especially with evil or harmful intent.
- to conspire in a fraud.
collude 近义词
conspire
更多collude例句
- Whether nor not a company is too big isn’t the issue, but whether or not that bigness enables it to set the rules of competition, collude, and quash competitors.
- As they proliferate, experts say, we need to make sure they don’t collude against us in damaging ways.
- She was arrested at the time, and released on bail, for covering a rally on behalf of political prisoners at the presidential office and charged with “colluding against national security” and “disturbing public order.”
- Police this morning arrested the paper’s founder, Jimmy Lai, on suspicion of colluding with foreign forces—a crime under the new national security law punishable by up to life in prison.
- Some people argue that the Democrats and Republicans are essentially a duopoly that colludes, really, to perpetuate their power at the expense of the average voter.
- Collusive labor makes it easier for employers to collude to extract maximum rents from customers.
- And what if the family and community collude in this inversion?
- Nor, Cortazzo said, did he collude with the geologist to rip off Roy.
- I argued that when markets are free, and when government does not collude with business, greed is useful.
- Associated words: collude, collusion, collusive, connivance.