释义 |
Definition of confederal in English: confederaladjective kənˈfɛd(ə)r(ə)lkənˈfedərəl Relating to or denoting a confederation. (与)同盟(或联盟、邦联)(有关)的 Example sentencesExamples - There is no single state, even confederal, of the North.
- An appellate system is more characteristic of a developed federal or confederal legal system, and it could be argued that the EC is ready for such a change.
- The symbolic reiteration of traditional objectives dispensed with, it went on to suggest more seriously a federal or confederal state, and joint authority as alternatives.
- The Transnistrian stance did not change much from the previous position favoring a confederal approach.
- If it could reform rapidly enough to gain legitimacy from its own population, unification could be confederal.
- Others are confederal or consociational, explicitly preserving in legal form some social identities within themselves.
- Some would say loose-knit states, such as Canada or Switzerland, mostly confederal in character.
- Although the specifics of the debate have changed, the nature of the debate between the parties, such as whether the plan should be conceived as a federal or confederal solution, has remained the same.
- He concludes by recommending the establishment of federal or confederal representative governments as a means of maintaining some degree of democracy.
- The confederal government shall have various administrative functions.
- The urge toward division which principally threatens large multinational states of a federal or confederal nature has not spared even the earliest ‘civilized’ and centralized states of Europe.
- France and the UK want a confederal Europe, with states retaining power and Europe run by the Council of Europe, made up of the Prime Ministers of the member states.
- On the whole, as Defranceschi explains, Paoli's idea of union was of a federal or rather confederal kind.
- Federal, quasifederal, and confederal constitutions aren't perfect by any means, and there are plenty of bad precedents to point to in constructing an argument against them.
- That means that it should be federal or confederal, and the component units should have independent taxing and spending authority.
- The proposed constitution prompted widespread debate arguments addressing the benefits and risks of federalism versus confederal arrangements, leading eventually to the Constitution taking effect in 1789.
OriginLate 18th century: from confederation, on the pattern of federal. Definition of confederal in US English: confederaladjectivekənˈfedərəl Relating to or denoting a confederation. (与)同盟(或联盟、邦联)(有关)的 Example sentencesExamples - The symbolic reiteration of traditional objectives dispensed with, it went on to suggest more seriously a federal or confederal state, and joint authority as alternatives.
- He concludes by recommending the establishment of federal or confederal representative governments as a means of maintaining some degree of democracy.
- If it could reform rapidly enough to gain legitimacy from its own population, unification could be confederal.
- Federal, quasifederal, and confederal constitutions aren't perfect by any means, and there are plenty of bad precedents to point to in constructing an argument against them.
- On the whole, as Defranceschi explains, Paoli's idea of union was of a federal or rather confederal kind.
- Others are confederal or consociational, explicitly preserving in legal form some social identities within themselves.
- The proposed constitution prompted widespread debate arguments addressing the benefits and risks of federalism versus confederal arrangements, leading eventually to the Constitution taking effect in 1789.
- There is no single state, even confederal, of the North.
- An appellate system is more characteristic of a developed federal or confederal legal system, and it could be argued that the EC is ready for such a change.
- Although the specifics of the debate have changed, the nature of the debate between the parties, such as whether the plan should be conceived as a federal or confederal solution, has remained the same.
- The urge toward division which principally threatens large multinational states of a federal or confederal nature has not spared even the earliest ‘civilized’ and centralized states of Europe.
- That means that it should be federal or confederal, and the component units should have independent taxing and spending authority.
- Some would say loose-knit states, such as Canada or Switzerland, mostly confederal in character.
- France and the UK want a confederal Europe, with states retaining power and Europe run by the Council of Europe, made up of the Prime Ministers of the member states.
- The confederal government shall have various administrative functions.
- The Transnistrian stance did not change much from the previous position favoring a confederal approach.
OriginLate 18th century: from confederation, on the pattern of federal. |