中英
carpetbagging
/ kɑːˈpɪtˌbæɡɪŋ /
  • 简明
  • adj.投机取巧的;外来政客的
  • n.投机行为;外来政客行为(政客在没有联系的地区寻求当选的行为)
  • vi.<非正式>投机取巧(carpetbag 的现在分词)
  • 双语例句
  • 权威例句
  • 1
    Yang was unceremoniously dumped, ousted by carpetbagging shareholders who'd hoped to make a pile from Microsoft's money.
    希望从微软大赚一笔的股东们发难,杨致远被迫唐突离职。
  • 2
    Several are owned by post-Soviet oligarchs or carpetbagging Americans, and some are burdened with perilous levels of debt.
    这些足球俱乐部有一些为苏联解体后的寡头政客们所拥有,或是被从美国来的投机倒把者所购买,另外还有一些负债累累。
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  • 百科
  • Carpetbagging

    In United States history, a carpetbagger was a Northerner (Yankee) who moved to the South after the U.S. Civil War, especially during the Reconstruction era (1865–1877), in order to profit from the instability and power vacuum that existed at this time.The term carpetbagger was a pejorative term referring to the carpet bags (a fashionable form of luggage at the time) which many of these newcomers carried. The term came to be associated with opportunism and exploitation by outsiders. The term is still used today to refer to an outsider perceived as using manipulation or fraud to obtain an objective.Together with Republicans, carpetbaggers were said to have politically manipulated and controlled former Confederate states for varying periods for their own financial and power gains. In sum, carpetbaggers were seen as insidious Northern outsiders with questionable objectives meddling in local politics, buying up plantations at fire-sale prices and taking advantage of Southerners.The term carpetbaggers was also used to describe the Republican political appointees who came South, arriving with their travel carpet bags. Southerners considered them ready to loot and plunder the defeated South.In modern usage in the U.S., the term is sometimes used derisively to refer to a politician who runs for public office in an area where he or she does not have deep community ties, or has lived only for a short time. It has also been used to describe a white rapper rewarded for co-opting a traditionally black art form. In the United Kingdom, the term was adopted to refer informally to those who join a mutual organization, such as a building society, in order to force it to demutualize, that is, to convert into a joint stock company, solely for personal financial gain.

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