propaganda
柯林斯词典
1. N-UNCOUNT Propaganda is information, often inaccurate information, that a political organization publishes or broadcasts in order to influence people. (政治組織的) 宣傳[表不滿]
The party adopted an aggressive propaganda campaign against its rivals. 該黨採用了一場對抗其對手的咄咄逼人的宣傳運動。
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propaganda /ˌprɒpəˈɡændə/
剑桥词典
- information , ideas , opinions , or images , often only giving one part of an argument , that are broadcast , published , or in some other way spread with the intention of influencing people's opinions
- He was brought up on a diet of political propaganda from birth .
- The whole nation was force-fed government propaganda about how well the country was doing.
- It's now up to the government's propaganda machine to restore the prime minister's image .
- The official propaganda machine went into overdrive when war broke out.
- Her ideas have been shamelessly perverted to serve the president's propaganda campaign .
宣傳;鼓吹
political /wartime propaganda 政治/戰時宣傳
At school we were fed communist/right-wing propaganda. 在學校時我們被灌輸了共産主義/右翼思想。
One official dismissed the ceasefire as a mere propaganda exercise . 一名官員將停火斥爲赤裸裸的宣傳伎倆。
例句
propagandize
verb [ 不及物動詞:後麪不接賓語的動詞 ] formal mainly disapproving (UK usually propagandise) ukYour browser doesn't support HTML5 audio
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to create or spread propaganda
宣傳;鼓吹 返回 propaganda