well-educated a. 受过良好教育的
well-educated[ adj ]
highly educated; having extensive information or understanding
<adj.all>
knowing instructorsa knowledgeable critic
a knowledgeable audience
- One of the keys to Iraq's strength, according to Anthony H. Cordesman, author of a book on the Iraq-Iran war, lies in a well-educated officer corps that includes many engineering graduates.
- Asked about exit polls following February's Iowa caucuses and New Hampshire primary that showed his white supporters were mostly upscale and well-educated rather than the working class he is appealing to, Jackson said: "That is changing.
- "But the study shows most of the progress is limited to the well-educated," he said.
- The results "indicate that public health campaigns have not had a substantial influence on the habits and behavior of these well-educated young adults," said the study in today's New England Journal of Medicine.
- Pentagon officials also want to assure a steady flow of well-educated recruits to handle the increasingly sophisticated weaponry of the high-technology battlefield.
- And while Mr. Jackson did do better among white voters this time, most of those were "liberal, upscale, well-educated" voters, according to both CBS and ABC.
- The "well-educated" Dew, who appealed the IRS's disallowances, is the sole subject of the judge's opinion, which rejects 1980-81 deductions of $25,883 and imposes civil negligence penalties.
- Poles are well-educated, loyal and law-abiding.
- 'There are a few well-educated blackies' in South Africa, he said, but blacks did not have the competence to run South Africa without help from the white minority.
- According to Mr Perrault, 'the economics may rest on power and a year-round port, but it was the young and well-educated workforce that made the smooth start-up possible.
- There will always be problems, but there are problems whatever sector you are in. A well-educated farmer has a good future in Denmark,' he says confidently.
- Obsessive fixations, a political self-righteousness intolerant of dissent, the arrest and rearrest without trial of well-educated social activists whom most Singaporeans regard as anything but "Marxist conspirators" have all served to sour public opinion.
- This suggests that savings banks and savings and loans that offer a number of investment options will be more successful in attracting the wealthy and the well-educated as customers.
- I recently returned from a trip through western Siberia, where I talked with a number of well-educated Soviet citizens.
- Other critics said the survey showed that the improvement being made was largely among the well-educated middle class, where drug abuse tends to be occasional, rather than among the poor.
- Lisa's death in an affluent, well-educated household attracted wide attention and raised the issue of the responsibility of neighbors, teachers and social workers to recognize and report evidence of child abuse.
- But these well-educated people are more likely than their uneducated peers to demand good jobs.
- In the LDP's landslide victory in July's general elections, the voting pattern pointed to the rising influence of city dwellers, including well-educated, middle-class businesmen and their families, political analysts say.
- In Mr. Walinsky's view, an increase in the number of police officers, especially well-educated ones, inevitably will lead to less crime.
- She wasn't "a well-educated woman, but she was a tremendous talker and could set a scene." He left school at 15, wrote essays and accumulated rejection slips.
- Thirty members of a group of "well-educated professionals" were rounded up in Tehran, Tabriz and other towns for coating metals with a thin layer of gold and selling them as pure gold, the agency said.
- In Dryden's time, a well-educated young man's school exercises included translating Latin into English verse.
- Vladimir A. Kryuchkov, painted a portrait of what the secret police chief called the "modern Cheka man," a well-educated professional whose work increasingly encompasses the struggle against smuggling, organized crime and drug trafficking.
- How that stacks up can be measured by the incredible testing disparities between Japanese and American students and in the competitive advantage given to Japanese industry by a well-educated, self-confident work force.
- Please understand that in this country the public sector has come to occupy a respectable place and I cannot afford to go against it.' Mr Narasimha Rao is optimistic about India's future, in part because of its huge reservoir of well-educated people.
- Yet, some investors now believe that the potential rewards of buying Russian assets more than outweigh these macro-risks. Russia is a country of vast natural resources, with 150m well-educated people and a high technological base.
- The new fashion and lifestyle magazine Mirabella has made its debut, but will this guide for the well-educated woman be a lasting hit, or will it join the heap of new magazines that fold in a few years? "It's going very well.
- From his references to Schopenauer, Hegel and Kant, he is very well-educated.
- "There is a continuing trend of young, well-educated liberal and left-wing whites to identify themselves with the ANC," said Tom Lodge, a political scientist at the University of the Witwatersrand and an expert on the ANC.
- Emerson (as quoted by Mr. Kauffman) advising writers to learn writing in the streets, not college, may make a figurative point, but such counsel coming from one of the well-off and well-educated is a bit much.