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单词 unassimilated
释义

Definition of unassimilated in English:

unassimilated

adjectiveʌnəˈsɪmɪleɪtɪdˌənəˈsiməˌlādəd
  • (especially of a people, an idea, or a culture) not absorbed or integrated into a wider society or culture.

    (尤指民族,观念,文化)未同化的;未归化的

    the peoples remain distinct and unassimilated
    unassimilated migrants from the countryside
    Example sentencesExamples
    • As a former professor, Nazerman would not have been representative of German Jewry had he been depicted as unassimilated.
    • On the one hand, the orthographical apparatus supports the supposed inferiority of black dialect as ‘broken’ English; on the other hand, italicizing Yiddish words underlines their unassimilated foreignness.
    • The Roma, who are scattered throughout the country, mostly in small camps on the outskirts of towns and cities, are in many ways culturally unassimilated.
    • More importantly, she attributes much of this newness or thirdness to the process of acquiring a second language, primarily because this achievement distinguishes her from her unassimilated ethnic peers and from ‘normal Americans.’
    • Future generations will inherit a tangle of rancorous, unassimilated, squabbling cultures with no common bond to hold them together, and a certain guarantee of the death of this nation as a harmonious ‘melting pot.’
    • In this instance, what is internalized also persists unassimilated; Keats is absorbed in material he claims to have incorporated, relying on the tale of a Fall precisely when he attempts to displace it.
    • Both assimilated and unassimilated Jews, both religious and secular Jews, were equally victimized by pogroms, persecutions and genocide.
    • The failure of assimilation created the current question that is subtly asked through racist journalism: can an unassimilated population still maintain human rights once they have been removed?
    • The persecution of European Jews impacted on Jews not simply as men and women, but also as religious and irreligious, assimilated and unassimilated, Zionist and non-Zionist, rich and poor, urban and rural, young and old.
    • All the embarrassing baggage of ethnicity - unassimilated habits, Yiddish accent, incomplete understanding of American mores - was projected onto the mother, a representative of outmoded values.
    • There is no such thing as a specifically Hungarian American holiday, perhaps because the attention of most unassimilated Hungarian Americans is focused on the mother country.
    • I know that many countries in Europe already have major problems with large unassimilated minorities.
    • Not only does it put unassimilated persons and groups at a severe disadvantage in the competition for scarce positions and resources, but it requires that persons transform their sense of identity in order to assimilate.
    • Were immigrants arriving in such numbers that they might remain unassimilated in cultural ghettoes, eventually undermining social or national cohesion?
    • Instead, we are treated to a catch-all of unassimilated third-century Christian heresies, with John Milton, Ralph Ellison, Anthrophagy, the synoptic Gospels, and Road Runner cartoons thrown in for our pleasure and instruction.
    • But the broader culture of ‘intolerance’ in certain unassimilated communities is a potentially much bigger problem.
    • As we saw in Chapter 2, a fear of divided loyalties and identities - supposedly the result of unassimilated ethnic groups - has underlain the formation of most nation-states.
    • The analysis also includes coding for assimilated or unassimilated names, helping us to determine the voters' first language - English or the language of their country of origin.
    • The first level consists of tales that circulated primarily in unassimilated band and tribal societies, though the tales may have only been written down after assimilation.
    • The mystery left unanswered is why Germany doesn't take the simpler, more obvious step - allowing immigration, but denying immigrants the welfare benefits that support an unassimilated opposition culture.

Derivatives

  • unassimilable

  • adjectiveʌnəˈsɪmɪləblˌənəˈsɪmələb(ə)l
    • (especially of a people, an idea, or a culture) unable to be absorbed or integrated into a wider society or way of thought.

      (尤指民族,观念,文化)未同化的;未归化的

      every group of newcomers was portrayed as unassimilable and alien
      Example sentencesExamples
      • In many ways, she came to embody what I came to consider my ‘Chineseness’ - that foreign, unassimilable, independent core.
      • This is especially the case when immigrants are aggressively unassimilable.
      • Against middle-class nirvana, we have working-class protest; against the romance of hetero-normative assimilation, we have the resistant strains of unassimilable difference.

Definition of unassimilated in US English:

unassimilated

adjectiveˌənəˈsiməˌlādəd
  • (especially of a people, an idea, or a culture) not absorbed or integrated into a wider society or culture.

    (尤指民族,观念,文化)未同化的;未归化的

    the peoples remain distinct and unassimilated
    unassimilated migrants from the countryside
    Example sentencesExamples
    • The Roma, who are scattered throughout the country, mostly in small camps on the outskirts of towns and cities, are in many ways culturally unassimilated.
    • The first level consists of tales that circulated primarily in unassimilated band and tribal societies, though the tales may have only been written down after assimilation.
    • In this instance, what is internalized also persists unassimilated; Keats is absorbed in material he claims to have incorporated, relying on the tale of a Fall precisely when he attempts to displace it.
    • The analysis also includes coding for assimilated or unassimilated names, helping us to determine the voters' first language - English or the language of their country of origin.
    • Future generations will inherit a tangle of rancorous, unassimilated, squabbling cultures with no common bond to hold them together, and a certain guarantee of the death of this nation as a harmonious ‘melting pot.’
    • As a former professor, Nazerman would not have been representative of German Jewry had he been depicted as unassimilated.
    • The mystery left unanswered is why Germany doesn't take the simpler, more obvious step - allowing immigration, but denying immigrants the welfare benefits that support an unassimilated opposition culture.
    • Not only does it put unassimilated persons and groups at a severe disadvantage in the competition for scarce positions and resources, but it requires that persons transform their sense of identity in order to assimilate.
    • Were immigrants arriving in such numbers that they might remain unassimilated in cultural ghettoes, eventually undermining social or national cohesion?
    • There is no such thing as a specifically Hungarian American holiday, perhaps because the attention of most unassimilated Hungarian Americans is focused on the mother country.
    • All the embarrassing baggage of ethnicity - unassimilated habits, Yiddish accent, incomplete understanding of American mores - was projected onto the mother, a representative of outmoded values.
    • But the broader culture of ‘intolerance’ in certain unassimilated communities is a potentially much bigger problem.
    • More importantly, she attributes much of this newness or thirdness to the process of acquiring a second language, primarily because this achievement distinguishes her from her unassimilated ethnic peers and from ‘normal Americans.’
    • On the one hand, the orthographical apparatus supports the supposed inferiority of black dialect as ‘broken’ English; on the other hand, italicizing Yiddish words underlines their unassimilated foreignness.
    • As we saw in Chapter 2, a fear of divided loyalties and identities - supposedly the result of unassimilated ethnic groups - has underlain the formation of most nation-states.
    • The persecution of European Jews impacted on Jews not simply as men and women, but also as religious and irreligious, assimilated and unassimilated, Zionist and non-Zionist, rich and poor, urban and rural, young and old.
    • Instead, we are treated to a catch-all of unassimilated third-century Christian heresies, with John Milton, Ralph Ellison, Anthrophagy, the synoptic Gospels, and Road Runner cartoons thrown in for our pleasure and instruction.
    • The failure of assimilation created the current question that is subtly asked through racist journalism: can an unassimilated population still maintain human rights once they have been removed?
    • Both assimilated and unassimilated Jews, both religious and secular Jews, were equally victimized by pogroms, persecutions and genocide.
    • I know that many countries in Europe already have major problems with large unassimilated minorities.
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更新时间:2025/2/7 9:25:48