voting的意思和读音

voting

: ['vəʊtɪŋ] : ['vəʊtɪŋ]

n.

v.“vote”

adj.appointed

n.polling,balloting

adj.elective

votingn.

1.the action of choosing sb/sth in an election or at a meeting

He was eliminated in the first round of voting.

Voting will take place on May 1. 5 1

tactical voting

to be of voting age

n.1.(),()

v.1.“vote”

v.1.The present participle of vote

1. * Page 5、 Voting Informal Debate ...

3. voter voting vouch ,,, ...

5. mental( voting) marriageable( ) ...

6. (Voting) [ 6, 9 ] ,

:,,,,,,

1.WITH a seven-point lead in the polls a few days before voting, the race for America's presidency is now Barack Obama's to lose.7%

2."This year, the scales are tipped, " he said. "And I think you're going to see a lot of Republicans voting for Obama this year. "

3.He said the critics of online voting "are well-meaning but they fail to take into account the context. "。”

4.In the market democracy the objective of the voting process is not a man, but a man's achievements, the products of his exertion.

5.In the lower frame of his cartoon, David Horsey shows us what could happen if an irresponsible young fool hacked into a voting system.西

6.Most anti-slavery men did not vote, because their names had been kept off the voting lists by pro-slavery officials.

7.Mentally ill persons unable to exercise their voting rights shall not do so after confirmation of their cases by an election committee .使使

8.In the Senate, Obama amassed a voting record in line with that of the Democratic Party's liberal wing.

9.Unlike India, Indonesia does not stagger its election, though some Christian districts will be allowed to delay voting a few days.

10.Hammerschmidt had a very conservative voting record and was a strong defender of President Nixon.