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单词 Anglophile
释义

Definition of Anglophile in English:

Anglophile

noun ˈaŋɡlə(ʊ)fʌɪlˈæŋɡləˌfaɪl
  • A person who is fond of or greatly admires England or Britain.

    亲英者,崇英者

    Example sentencesExamples
    • ‘We're Anglophiles and we just liked the traditional Georgian nature of the house,’ explained Lea Berman.
    • Most of them had fled England to find freedom of religion, but by 1952 their descendants had forgotten old animosities and were unabashed Anglophiles.
    • Behind these groups, but of lesser importance, are a number of capitalists, Anglophiles, and intellectuals who believe that the future of mankind depends upon the domination of the British empire.
    • Francophiles and Anglophiles abound, but us Ameriphiles are quite rare.
    • In her new book, Penn-Nabrit describes the place as brimming with ‘moderate Democrats and compassionate conservatives, and, of course, a lot of Anglophiles.’
    • As well as Catherine herself, the upper ranks of the nobility had prominent among them a significant number of Anglophiles, including Count Chernyshev, Count Vorontsov, and Princess Dashkava.
    • ‘There are still a lot of Anglophiles around,’ one US radio plugger told me last week.
    • Mr and Mrs Duren were Anglophiles, who spent many holidays in England, walking in the Lake District and Rutland as well as the Cotswolds.
    • Dedicated Anglophiles, they have produced an unusual and wonderful book.
    • Alas, a resolute Anglophile, Nasseri doesn't want France, he wants Britain.
    • Adding to the charm of the series, at least for Anglophiles such as myself, is the inclusion of various familiar characters from the Saint's world.
    • There are a certain number of Americans who are Anglophiles, some of whom are influential.
    • It will baffle Anglophiles and provide psychology majors and cinema buffs much to talk about.
    • But it was as the first host of Masterpiece Theatre that Americans, and not just Anglophiles, knew him best.
    • Is BBC America turning us into a nation of Anglophiles?
    • The couple, who describe themselves as Anglophiles moved to this country because they wanted their daughter to grow up here.
    • But watch the royalists and the Anglophiles come out in droves when Chuckie arrived in Australia in a couple of weeks.
    • Her parents were Anglophiles and sent her to London, where she studied at the Slade School, 1952-6.
    • If you aren't averse to indulging a light-hearted, inspirational prison fantasy flick, Greenfingers is a worthy film for the romantics and the Anglophiles among you.
    • They headline the NME tour and like many a skinny, white American band they are committed Anglophiles.
adjective ˈaŋɡlə(ʊ)fʌɪlˈæŋɡləˌfaɪl
  • Fond or greatly admiring England or Britain.

    亲英者,崇英者

    the Anglophile General Marshall
    Holland certainly lives up to its reputation of being Anglophile
    Example sentencesExamples
    • In the glut of Anglophile writing, there are a few that make the grade.
    • The next morning I flew on to Bird Island where I was met by the owner Guy Savy, an Anglophile Seychellois of French extraction.
    • In the relatively compressed cast of an upper-middle class family of Anglophile Indians and a few members of their township, there is quite enough material to explore ideas of the divisions within people and their cultures.
    • Born Johann Heinrich Fussli, the artist received a broad and scholarly education on the Continent, aligning himself with the Anglophile scholar Johann Jacob Breitinger at an early stage.
    • Normally this statement induced enthusiastic enquiries from Anglophile Americans.
    • Yet Mary's influence was not entirely dead and the Anglophile policy had its limits, as the assassinations of Moray and Lennox in 1570 and 1571 and the execution of Morton in 1581 dramatically illustrated.
    • The world's most Anglophile country is Nigeria.
    • There seems to be a consensus, at least among Anglophile observers, that we are witnessing the greatest Test series in a quarter of a century.
    • The rationality that Anglophile observers attributed to the British was not always evident to Britons themselves.
    • In stark contrast to the Anglophile sentiments professed to in the Daily Telegraph, the Hale interview was militantly anti-British in tone.
    • The more fair-minded breed of chroniclers, who have benefited from newly released Russian documents after the Soviet collapse, do provide a less Anglophile version of history.
    • While some British and Anglophile linguists denigrated American English as provincial and corrupt, Webster inverted the argument.
    • Also, it doesn't hurt that the Northeast is the most Anglophile part of the U.S. And the English are known for their taste for a bit of lamb pie.
    • Malta has a famously Anglophile culture and, if moving there permanently, you can buy any property irrespective of value.
    • Although the alliance's cause is quintessentially British, it has attracted support from wealthy Anglophile foreigners.
    • In 1980, 18-year-old Prince Abdullah was sent by his Anglophile father to train as a British army officer at the Royal Military Academy at Sandhurst.
    • In 1560 Elizabeth scored a crucial success in the creation of an Anglophile government in Scotland and in Mary's apparent renunciation of her rival claim in the treaty of Edinburgh.
    • However, Jerusalem - William Blake's hauntingly Anglophile anthem - has fallen foul of the Church of Scotland hierarchy because it is seen as too much of a homage to the Auld Enemy.
    • Individually and communally they are industrious, Anglophile and delightful.
    • It's a really Anglophile music community so we go down well.

Derivatives

  • Anglophilia

  • noun ˌaŋɡlə(ʊ)ˈfɪlɪəˌæŋɡləˈfɪliə
    • One young German conservative historian I met took refuge in Anglophilia - his England, of course, being an England of the past.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • But in the three years that I've been living in Montreal, I can feel any remaining Anglophilia beginning to disintegrate.
      • Cashing in on Japan's Anglophilia and love of manga-like fantasy, Potter has been cunningly marketed to attract a more grown-up audience than in other countries.
      • In 1807 his Anglophilia suffered the shock of a morally questionable British attack on Copenhagen and the Danish fleet, undertaken to prevent a French seizure of Danish vessels.
      • If in England it rallied a demoralized citizenry, here in America it validated the Anglophilia of the educated classes and gave British imperialism a good odor.

Definition of Anglophile in US English:

Anglophile

nounˈæŋɡləˌfaɪlˈaNGɡləˌfīl
  • A person who is fond of or greatly admires England or Britain.

    亲英者,崇英者

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Her parents were Anglophiles and sent her to London, where she studied at the Slade School, 1952-6.
    • Behind these groups, but of lesser importance, are a number of capitalists, Anglophiles, and intellectuals who believe that the future of mankind depends upon the domination of the British empire.
    • In her new book, Penn-Nabrit describes the place as brimming with ‘moderate Democrats and compassionate conservatives, and, of course, a lot of Anglophiles.’
    • They headline the NME tour and like many a skinny, white American band they are committed Anglophiles.
    • The couple, who describe themselves as Anglophiles moved to this country because they wanted their daughter to grow up here.
    • Alas, a resolute Anglophile, Nasseri doesn't want France, he wants Britain.
    • Adding to the charm of the series, at least for Anglophiles such as myself, is the inclusion of various familiar characters from the Saint's world.
    • It will baffle Anglophiles and provide psychology majors and cinema buffs much to talk about.
    • But it was as the first host of Masterpiece Theatre that Americans, and not just Anglophiles, knew him best.
    • Francophiles and Anglophiles abound, but us Ameriphiles are quite rare.
    • ‘We're Anglophiles and we just liked the traditional Georgian nature of the house,’ explained Lea Berman.
    • Most of them had fled England to find freedom of religion, but by 1952 their descendants had forgotten old animosities and were unabashed Anglophiles.
    • Mr and Mrs Duren were Anglophiles, who spent many holidays in England, walking in the Lake District and Rutland as well as the Cotswolds.
    • Dedicated Anglophiles, they have produced an unusual and wonderful book.
    • There are a certain number of Americans who are Anglophiles, some of whom are influential.
    • ‘There are still a lot of Anglophiles around,’ one US radio plugger told me last week.
    • As well as Catherine herself, the upper ranks of the nobility had prominent among them a significant number of Anglophiles, including Count Chernyshev, Count Vorontsov, and Princess Dashkava.
    • If you aren't averse to indulging a light-hearted, inspirational prison fantasy flick, Greenfingers is a worthy film for the romantics and the Anglophiles among you.
    • Is BBC America turning us into a nation of Anglophiles?
    • But watch the royalists and the Anglophiles come out in droves when Chuckie arrived in Australia in a couple of weeks.
adjectiveˈæŋɡləˌfaɪlˈaNGɡləˌfīl
  • Fond or admiring of England or Britain.

    the Anglophile General Marshall
    Holland certainly lives up to its reputation of being Anglophile
    Example sentencesExamples
    • In 1980, 18-year-old Prince Abdullah was sent by his Anglophile father to train as a British army officer at the Royal Military Academy at Sandhurst.
    • Born Johann Heinrich Fussli, the artist received a broad and scholarly education on the Continent, aligning himself with the Anglophile scholar Johann Jacob Breitinger at an early stage.
    • There seems to be a consensus, at least among Anglophile observers, that we are witnessing the greatest Test series in a quarter of a century.
    • Although the alliance's cause is quintessentially British, it has attracted support from wealthy Anglophile foreigners.
    • Individually and communally they are industrious, Anglophile and delightful.
    • In the relatively compressed cast of an upper-middle class family of Anglophile Indians and a few members of their township, there is quite enough material to explore ideas of the divisions within people and their cultures.
    • While some British and Anglophile linguists denigrated American English as provincial and corrupt, Webster inverted the argument.
    • In the glut of Anglophile writing, there are a few that make the grade.
    • The next morning I flew on to Bird Island where I was met by the owner Guy Savy, an Anglophile Seychellois of French extraction.
    • Malta has a famously Anglophile culture and, if moving there permanently, you can buy any property irrespective of value.
    • The more fair-minded breed of chroniclers, who have benefited from newly released Russian documents after the Soviet collapse, do provide a less Anglophile version of history.
    • In 1560 Elizabeth scored a crucial success in the creation of an Anglophile government in Scotland and in Mary's apparent renunciation of her rival claim in the treaty of Edinburgh.
    • Yet Mary's influence was not entirely dead and the Anglophile policy had its limits, as the assassinations of Moray and Lennox in 1570 and 1571 and the execution of Morton in 1581 dramatically illustrated.
    • Normally this statement induced enthusiastic enquiries from Anglophile Americans.
    • It's a really Anglophile music community so we go down well.
    • Also, it doesn't hurt that the Northeast is the most Anglophile part of the U.S. And the English are known for their taste for a bit of lamb pie.
    • However, Jerusalem - William Blake's hauntingly Anglophile anthem - has fallen foul of the Church of Scotland hierarchy because it is seen as too much of a homage to the Auld Enemy.
    • The world's most Anglophile country is Nigeria.
    • The rationality that Anglophile observers attributed to the British was not always evident to Britons themselves.
    • In stark contrast to the Anglophile sentiments professed to in the Daily Telegraph, the Hale interview was militantly anti-British in tone.
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