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feminist

/fem-uh-nist/US // ˈfɛm ə nɪst //UK // (ˈfɛmɪnɪst) //

女权主义者,女权主义,女权主义者,女权运动者

Definitions

adj.形容词 adjective
  1. 1

    Sometimes fem·i·nis·tic .

    • : advocating social, political, legal, and economic rights for women equal to those of men.
n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : an advocate of such rights.

Examples

  • In 2015, Australian director Jocelyn Moorhouse topped the Year In Review list with “The Dressmaker,” her delightful feminist take on the spaghetti Western.

  • As one New Hampshire activist — a lifelong feminist — told me in early 2017, “Based on what happened with Hillary, I think we now need to nominate a man.”

  • On the last Friday in February, Cynthia Pong, a former public defender turned self-described feminist career coach, stood before a group of some 100 women gathered at LinkedIn’s New York headquarters in the Empire State building.

  • Andersonville is also home to Women and Children First, one of the largest feminist bookstores in the United States.

  • Within two weeks of the back-to-back feminist protests, Mexico would begin closing down as a result of the coronavirus pandemic.

  • We just saw an edit of one called, “Doug Becomes A Feminist,” and I just really enjoyed watching it.

  • The feminist movement has encouraged women that they can initiate romantic relationships, too.

  • It might be the most powerful affirmation, and perhaps even a feminist or political statement, from any public person this year.

  • It was fearless and raunchy and fun and ridiculous and weird and feminist and powerful.

  • But it is particularly galling to watch the feminist superhero be treated in such a way.

  • "Margaret Fuller's father was thirty-two when she was born," writes Katharine Anthony in her biography of the great feminist.

  • I know a certain ardent feminist, who is all for late marriage for women, and abhors my ideas on this subject.

  • Oh yes, Amory knew—any feminist knows—the toils men impose on women when they talk about Chivalry!

  • He would have attached a drapery business to the Royal Standard; but the feminist picture did even better.

  • But the misogynism of Strindberg was something far more than a merely intellectual appreciation of the Anti-Feminist standpoint.