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unionism

/yoon-yuh-niz-uhm/US // ˈyun yəˌnɪz əm //UK // (ˈjuːnjəˌnɪzəm) //

工会主义,联盟主义,工会精神,工会制

Definitions

n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : the principle of union, especially trade unionism.
    • : attachment to a union.
    • : loyalty to the federal union of the United States of America, especially at the time of the Civil War.

Examples

  • As the writer Marc Levinson shows, brothers George and John Hartford, who had helped found the company in the 19th century, were paternalists who hated trade unionism.

  • Given the toxicity of the Conservative “brand” in Scotland, that could prove fatal for unionism.

  • Even if public sector unionism limps on, in policy terms, the right has already won.

  • “Terrible shall be the fate of the enemies of Social Unionism” is one of the rhetorical cries of Eugenia.

  • And hardly a degree less menacing is this gigantic octapus of labor unionism—of inexcusable socialism.

  • Land-reform in its earliest stages, like trade unionism in England, was accompanied by disorder.

  • I have watched the long struggle of unionism in America and I know the law that has governed all its ups and downs.

  • These are the principles of revolutionary unionism, the principles of the international proletariat.

  • Of this slavery does revolutionary unionism speak in the name of the revolutionary worker.