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 clientele [,kli:ɒn'tel]   添加此单词到默认生词本
n. 诉讼委托人, 客户

[法] 委托人, 受保护者, 门徒


  1. The customers of a specified business or industry; clientele.
    顾客一特定商业或行业的顾客;主顾
  2. My clientele like quality products.
    我的客户最喜欢高品质的产品。
  3. Our clientele has always favoured quality rather than quantity.
    我们的主顾从来都是看重质量胜过数量。


clientele
[ noun ]
customers collectively
<noun.group>
they have an upper class clientele


Clientele \Cli`en*tele"\ (? or ?), n. [L. clientela: cf. F.
client[`e]le.]
1. The condition or position of a client; clientship. [Obs.]
--Bp. Hall.

2. The clients or dependents of a nobleman of patron.

3. The persons who make habitual use of the services of
another person; one's clients, collectively; as, the
clientele of a lawyer, doctor, notary, etc.

  1. Resellers are good at selling computer systems to traditional technical markets, but lack extensive experience and a broad clientele among businesses.
  2. Mr. Shin's The Palace in Honolulu attracted a clientele considerably down the social ladder.
  3. While 8% may seem small, some U.S. bankers conceded that, at this time, that share was about all foreign firms could successfully handle because of their relatively limited clientele for yen-denominated securities.
  4. His clientele at Harry's Gift Shop is almost exclusively American.
  5. "Those recipes just sprung to mind when we tasted it," said Mr. Manzi, adding that his staunch English clientele wouldn't have wanted anything more outlandish.
  6. Now preservationists worry the verdant expanse may fall prey to developers catering to their cramped clientele down south.
  7. Either because of its tough clientele, or because the health-conscious Lyubers did not drink enough alcohol, the bar lost money, Kutuzov said.
  8. "This is really geared for only about 10 percent of the market, for the clientele willing to pay a bit more for quality fruit," said Steve Krampe, sales manager for the company.
  9. In terms of numbers Cork Street is just one gallery off its peak. Most dealers reckon that trade has picked up since the devaluation of sterling, especially those who cater for a mainly foreign clientele.
  10. Mr. Morgan maintains that his change in clientele didn't reflect any change in values; even at the ACLU, he says, he never considered himself an "issues" lawyer.
  11. They have a point, but many people have learned to ski quite happily in Bormio, and it gets considerable repeat business among an affectionate clientele. Facilities - particularly lifts and snowmaking - were spruced up for the 1985 World Championships.
  12. Chairman Nghi estimates that production for District 5 has yet to reach half of what is was during the Vietnam War years, when little factories, bars and restaurants served an international clientele of American soldiers and Southeast Asian businessmen.
  13. Susan Doughan, co-owner of Chicago's Ivan Noel salon, said about 20 percent of her clientele are men.
  14. "We have to energize and mobilize that party of non-voters, who are our natural clientele.
  15. Since moving to Geneva from his native Beirut about 1950, Mr. Safra has nurtured a clientele particularly among Latin American and Middle Eastern elites, especially those from his own Jewish community.
  16. "I swore I'd never do it," said Cain, who's also a city councilman. "It's the clientele I've got that looks at me and says `Hey, your coffee is too cheap.'
  17. In the high season, its team of 400 staff can swell to more than 4,000. What is constant - according to marketing manager Pamela Knight - is the clientele: 'We do a great deal of long-term and repeat business.
  18. Resorts, however, are not relying on the campaign to attract new clientele.
  19. Atlantic City, Las Vegas and Tahoe have to offer credit to attract their more diverse clientele.
  20. They opened the store three years ago, and their clientele is split evenly between Americans and the French.
  21. "What you're doing is working with your existing clientele," he says.
  22. Merchants who cater to the carriage trade complain that the government's proposal to hike taxes on big-ticket items - including expensive cars, yachts, jewelry and furs, as well as wine and liquor - discriminates against their well-heeled clientele.
  23. In the bar of the only white hotel, the Afrikaner clientele worries that the government has gone soft on nonwhites.
  24. Our clientele is pretty sophisticated.
  25. It targets a very different crowd from the white-collar clientele of Federal's "front-door" document-delivery business, and the company has had to fine-tune its marketing.
  26. It certainly had the tattiness of a Viennese cafe; a proper Stammlokal which looked after its regulars. Signs and posters in Russian pointed to the possibility of Russian artists forming a part of its clientele, but there were none there that night.
  27. "These are definitely not typical of the clientele that would be pricing our emeralds and diamonds," she said.
  28. But slots are the rage with today's know-nothing gamblers, who are a far cry from the casino clientele of yesteryear.
  29. Instead of streamlining, Mr. Manella said, he will try to boost Arden's sales, in part by attracting a younger clientele.
  30. Shops are being refurbished with chandeliers and marble facades. Well-to-do Moslems venturing for the first time in many years to the Vieux Quartier restaurant in Ashrafieh now comprise 20 per cent of the establishment's clientele.
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