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tribune

/trib-yoon, trih-byoon/US // ˈtrɪb yun, trɪˈbyun //UK // (ˈtrɪbjuːn) //

报纸,论坛报,护民报,护民官

Definitions

n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : a person who upholds or defends the rights of the people.
    • : Roman History. any of various administrative officers, especially one of 10 officers elected to protect the interests and rights of the plebeians from the patricians.any of the six officers of a legion who rotated in commanding the legion during the year.

Examples

  • But one day, scanning the classified ads in The Minneapolis Tribune, she saw a job opportunity that appealed to her.

  • A smaller headline in the Herald Tribune stated that Black September, headed by Ali Salameh, had taken credit for the operation.

  • Klopfer told the South Bend Tribune after the Allen County Right to Life filed complaints with the Indiana Attorney General.

  • The pages of the Salt Lake Tribune have rarely been so animated.

  • Then, the Texas Tribune revealed her campaign had “juked the numbers.”

  • You cite the case of some who are admirable tea-party oracles, but who cannot utter half a dozen sentences in the tribune.

  • There are few specimens of political oratory in the English language which rival some of the speeches of this young tribune.

  • The Tribune stood leisurely in as soon as the fleet anchored, till she was within half a mile of the town.

  • The next morning the Tribune published the letters and congratulated the Army boys.

  • The meetings of the comitia tributa were generally presided over by a tribune, although sometimes by one of the consuls.