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vested interests

既得利益,既得利益者,既得利益集团,既得利益者的利益

Related Words

Definitions

n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : a special interest in an existing system, arrangement, or institution for particular personal reasons.
    • : a permanent right given to an employee under a pension plan.
    • : vested interests, the persons, groups, etc., who benefit the most from existing business or financial systems.

Synonyms & Antonyms

Examples

  • “Everyone has a vested interest in getting the world back to normal as quickly as possible,” said Jon Gieselman, President of Expedia Brands.

  • So knowing all that, in some respects, there’s just this culture of fear that some people — it could be police unions or political interests — have a vested interest in promoting.

  • Of course, they have a huge vested interest in getting it right but that ultimately is a very good thing for the digital ad industry and its constituents as Google won’t make moves in the way Apple has.

  • Put your point of view in because a lot of the people attending these meetings are big players with big vested interests.

  • Yet in light of their vested interests, and with an arsenal limited to vapid statements, this seems out of the question.

  • But in the case of black women, another study found no lack of interest.

  • But if you have a hearing and you prove that someone is mature enough, well then that state interest evaporates.

  • While public interest in Ebola continues to dwindle, the epidemic itself continues to soar.

  • Lennon casually told some DC friends about it and found there was local interest in establishing Dinner Parties.

  • At the same time, campaigns are spending less while the special-interest groups are spending more.

  • In the parish churches, many of which are of great interest, the predominant styles are Decorated and Perpendicular.

  • And with some expressions of mutual good-will and interest, master and man separated.

  • A desultory conversation on politics, in which neither took the slightest interest, was a safe neutral ground.

  • His also was the intellectual point of view, and the intellectual interest in knowledge and its deductions.

  • She stabbed him, noting the effect upon him with a detached interest that seemed indifferent to his pain.