privatize / ˈpraɪ vəˌtaɪz /

⚽高中词汇私有化私营化公开化转化为私有

privatize 的定义

v. 有主动词 verb

pri·va·tized, pri·va·tiz·ing.

  1. to transfer from public or government control or ownership to private enterprise: a campaign promise to privatize some of the public lands.
  2. to make exclusive; delimit or appropriate: special-interest groups attempting to privatize social issues.

更多privatize例句

  1. Prime minister Abiy Ahmed’s plans to privatize the telecommunications industry have been a stop-start process since he first announced in 2018 that he would be inviting in competitors.
  2. You only have to look at what Florida, Arizona, Georgia, Iowa, New Hampshire, Kansas and some other states are now doing to see that her agenda to privatize public education is alive and thriving.
  3. In 2013, she co-founded an advocacy group called the Network for Public Education, a coalition of organizations that oppose privatizing public education and high-stakes standardized testing.
  4. Gore wanted to privatize more of those services, which could have meant job losses at the county.
  5. From 2008 to 2017, the Gianforte Family Foundation donated a total of $19,000 to the Heritage Foundation, which supports privatizing public land and works to spread climate-change denial.
  6. This runs in stark contrast to the temptation to privatize every resource and turn it into a profitable market.
  7. “Privatize” rabbinic courts:  “denude” them of legal powers and government budgets.
  8. All you have to do is sign the Ryan budget into law and privatize Medicare.
  9. Forget about the Second Amendment—the gun lobby, abetted by timorous Republicans, is trying to privatize law and order.
  10. George W. Bush claimed a mandate after 2004, and then promptly saw Democrats decimate his proposal to privatize Social Security.