junket

英 ['dʒʌŋkɪt] 美 ['dʒʌŋkɪt]
  • n. 野餐;游览
  • vi. 野餐;去郊游
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junket 公费旅游

来自拉丁语iuncata,芦苇编织的篮子,来自拉丁语iuncus,芦苇,词源同junk.原义为提着一篮食物到外面郊游,野炊,引申词义欢乐游,后来用于指政府人员的公费旅游。

junket (n.)
late 14c., "basket in which fish are caught or carried," from Medieval Latin iuncata "rush basket," perhaps from Latin iuncus "rush." Shifted meaning by 1520s to "feast, banquet," probably via notion of a picnic basket, which led to extended sense of "pleasure trip" (1814), and then to "tour by government official at public expense for no discernable public benefit" (by 1886, American English). Compare Italian cognate giuncata "cream cheese" (originally made in a rush basket), a sense of junket also found in Middle English and preserved lately in dialects.
1. Shevchenko was in Moscow yesterday, for some publicity junket.
昨天舍瓦在莫斯科参与一些公共活动.

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2. Today the bards must drink and junket.
今天‘大诗人们’要设宴畅饮.

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3. They are and sour pork, almond junket, shrimp omelet and Chicken in and sour sauce.
茉莉点了糖醋排骨, 杏仁豆腐, 虾仁煎蛋和糖醋鸡块.

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4. Her junket won't change many Chinese minds but It'speak volumes about her party's changing priorities.
她出的这一趟差没能改变太多中国人的想法,但却突出表现了民主党政策优先级的转变.

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