reconcilement / ˈrɛk ənˌsaɪl /

调解和解调和调停

reconcilement2 个定义

v. 有主动词 verb

rec·on·ciled, rec·on·cil·ing.

  1. to cause to accept or be resigned to something not desired: He was reconciled to his fate.
  2. to win over to friendliness; cause to become amicable: to reconcile hostile persons.
  3. to compose or settle.
v. 无主动词 verb

rec·on·ciled, rec·on·cil·ing.

  1. to become reconciled.

reconcilement 近义词

n. 名词 noun

reconciliation

更多reconcilement例句

  1. Carmona has also worked with a psychologist to further the process of self-acceptance and to reconcile with his family that was ultimately successful.
  2. Total said it was acting in line with the 2015 Paris agreement on climate change and that it could not reconcile differences with API over carbon pricing, subsidies for electric vehicles and the regulation of methane emissions.
  3. They can be valid each in their own terms, but they may sometimes be very difficult or even impossible to reconcile.
  4. As a result, they had to spend time and resources reconciling, validating and recalculating royalties to verify accuracy.
  5. Investigators said they could not reconcile inconsistencies in the testimony of Wilkie, Powers, Cashour and Hutton because they refused to sit for a follow-up interview based on additional evidence.
  6. Therefore there can be no question either of reconcilement or of opposition between the attributes of each.
  7. One's reconcilement with Christmas is due neither to one's stomach nor to a taste for the wit and wisdom of cracker manufacturers.
  8. Reconcilement with God is the foundation, manifestly and of course, of all peace; and this we have as Christs direct gift to us.
  9. For, as Milton wisely expresses, 'Never can true reconcilement grow where wounds of deadly hate have pierced so deep.'
  10. Old Muzzy visited me pretty often, and once Rupert himself came down and made offers towards a reconcilement.