柯林斯詞典affirm /??f??m/ (affirming,affirmed,affirms) 1. V-T If you affirm that something is true or that something exists, you state firmly and publicly that it is true or exists. 公開肯定[正式] The court affirmed that the information can be made public under the Freedom of Information Act. 法院公開肯定了此信息能依據(jù)《自由信息法案》公之于眾。 ...a speech in which he affirmed a commitment to lower taxes. …在其中他公開肯定了減稅承諾的一次演講。2. affirmationN-VAR 公開肯定 The North Atlantic Treaty begins with the affirmation that its parties "reaffirm their faith in the purposes and principles of the Charter of the United Nations." 《北大西洋公約》以公開肯定其成員“重申其對《聯(lián)合國憲章》的目的以及原則的信念”開頭。3. V-T If an event affirms something, it shows that it is true or exists. 證實(shí)[正式] Everything I had accomplished seemed to affirm that opinion. 我所做成的每件事似乎都證實(shí)了那個(gè)觀點(diǎn)。4. affirmationN-UNCOUNT 證實(shí)[also 'a' N] The ruling was a welcome affirmation of the constitutional right to free speech. 此裁決是對言論自由這一憲法權(quán)利的受人歡迎的肯定。 返回 affirm劍橋詞典to state something as true 證實(shí);確認(rèn);斷言 [ 詞或詞組后面接一個(gè)that從句 ] The suspect affirmed (that) he had been at home all evening . 犯罪嫌疑人聲稱他整個(gè)晚上都呆在家中。 She affirmed her intention to apply for the post . 她承認(rèn)自己有意應(yīng)聘這一職位。 to publicly show your support for an opinion or idea (公開)聲明 The government has affirmed its commitment to equal rights . 政府聲明了其致力于權(quán)利平等的承諾。 返回 affirm