lobby
- IPA[ˈlɒbi]
英式
- a room providing a space out of which one or more other rooms or corridors lead, typically one near the entrance of a public building;(in the UK) any of several large halls in the Houses of Parliament in which MPs may meet members of the public.
- seek to influence (a legislator) on an issue
noun: lobby, plural noun: lobbies
- 釋義
- 相關詞
名詞
- 1. a room providing a space out of which one or more other rooms or corridors lead, typically one near the entrance of a public building they went into the hotel lobby 同義詞
- 2. (in the UK) any of several large halls in the Houses of Parliament in which MPs may meet members of the public.
- ▪ (in the UK) each of two corridors in the Houses of Parliament to which MPs retire to vote.
- ▪ informal (in the UK) lobby correspondents collectively.
- 3. a group of people seeking to influence legislators on a particular issue contact an anti-traffic lobby for advice and information 同義詞
- ▪ an organized attempt by members of the public to influence legislators a recent lobby of Parliament by pensioners
動詞
- 1. seek to influence (a legislator) on an issue they insist on their right to lobby Congress the organization was formed to lobby for student concerns 同義詞
- (in the UK) a senior political journalist of a group receiving direct but unattributable ...
Oxford Dictionary
- a body formed to influence legislation on a particular issue: the grassroots campaigning of lobby groups for public education
Oxford Dictionary
- (in Australia) an independent lobby group formed in 1972 to promote feminist values and ... the Women's Electoral Lobby took some time to develop a childcare policy
Oxford Dictionary
- 更多解釋
- IPA[ˈläbē]
美式
- a room providing a space out of which one or more other rooms or corridors lead, typically one ... they went into the hotel lobby
- seek to influence (a politician or public official) on an issue: it is recommending that booksellers lobby their representatives a group lobbying for better rail services
Oxford American Dictionary