(noun.) conduct as a citizen; 'award for good citizenship'.
(noun.) the status of a citizen with rights and duties.
校对:伍德罗
双语例句
It is, of course, arbitrary to separate industrial competency from capacity in good citizenship. 约翰·杜威.民主与教育.
As the idea of citizenship failed and faded before the new occasions, there remained no inner, that is to say no real, unity in the system at all. 赫伯特·乔治·威尔斯.世界史纲.
It is democratic machinery with an educated citizenship behind it that embodies all the fears of the conservative and the hopes of the radical. 沃尔特·李普曼.政治序论.
It is doubtful if they took to city life and citizenship straight away. 赫伯特·乔治·威尔斯.世界史纲.
Others had self-government and the right to trade or marry in Rome, without full Roman citizenship. 赫伯特·乔治·威尔斯.世界史纲.
They extended their citizenship cautiously but steadily. 赫伯特·乔治·威尔斯.世界史纲.
In 89 B.C. all free inhabitants of Italy became Roman citizens; in 212 A.D. the citizenship was extended to all free men in the empire. 赫伯特·乔治·威尔斯.世界史纲.
And was not the new education an enemy to good citizenship, because it set up a rival standard to the established traditions of the community? 约翰·杜威.民主与教育.
Rousseau consciously set aside the problem of nationality or citizenship; he was cosmopolitan, and explicitly renounced the idea of planning the education of a Frenchman or a Swiss. 李贝.西洋科学史.
The need to keep communications open in this great and growing mass of citizenship was evident from the first. 赫伯特·乔治·威尔斯.世界史纲.
When the election took place in November, 1860, I had not been a resident of Illinois long enough to gain citizenship and could not, therefore, vote. 尤利西斯·格兰特.U.S.格兰特的个人回忆录.
To the Athenians or the Spartans it would mean letting in a lot of foreigners to the advantages of citizenship. 赫伯特·乔治·威尔斯.世界史纲.