| 释义 | 
		Definition of mainstream in English: mainstreamnoun ˈmeɪnstriːmˈmeɪnˌstrim the mainstream1The ideas, attitudes, or activities that are shared by most people and regarded as normal or conventional. 主流;主要倾向  they withdrew from the mainstream of European politics Example sentencesExamples -  Education policy often leads the way to integrate new ideas into the mainstream.
 -  There's a lot of symbiosis between the activists and the mainstream.
 -  He has a special interest in attempting to convey academic ideas to the mainstream, perhaps through print journalism.
 -  Crucially, these ideas were not developed in the mainstream of political discourse but on the margins and then popularised.
 -  The problem is, the ideas push into the mainstream of politics, and here we have a problem.
 -  But this year the list is five years old, and Porter's ideas have joined the mainstream.
 -  I don't think they want a major confrontation when they are desperate to enter the mainstream of politics.
 -  If you can't, it only indicates the extent to which your views are way out of the mainstream of American politics.
 -  Its attitudes to women also place it outside the mainstream.
 -  In fact, Linux is nowhere near the mainstream of computer desktop operating systems.
 -  Before computers entered the mainstream, talented programmers were rare.
 -  We know blogging has hit the mainstream for sure when companies are trying to make a profit on what started as a grass-roots effort.
 -  As they point out, the disease of neo-conservatism is more in the mainstream of American politics than many would like to admit.
 -  These attitudes place you outside the mainstream markets we wish to service.
 -  Prior to independence, tropical forest foragers remained outside the mainstream of society and politics.
 -  What this means is that only certain people can find a forum for their ideas in the mainstream and media.
 -  The overwhelming message carried by the mainstream is that corporate activities are largely benign and certainly not worth systematic investigation.
 -  We predict whether the mainstream will adapt those attitudes or not.
 -  Penrose veers into irony in the lengths to which he goes to point out where his ideas deviate from the mainstream.
 -  By leaving the GOP, Buchanan marginalized himself from the mainstream of American politics.
 
 - 1.1mass noun Jazz that is neither traditional nor modern, based on the 1930s swing style and consisting especially of solo improvisation on chord sequences.
主流派爵士乐(既非传统风格又非现代风格的爵士乐,以20世纪30年代的强节奏爵士音乐风格为基础,主要由和弦横进形式的即兴独奏构成)  it was a form of jazz that had strayed away from the mainstream Example sentencesExamples -  KSDS is a 24-hour mainstream jazz radio station, licensed to the San Diego Community College District.
 -  Almost all mainstream jazz is in 4/4-four strums to the bar.
 -  ‘The music is mostly traditional jazz, Dixieland and mainstream jazz,’ said Mr Frank, a double-bass player who took to the stage himself with his Dixieland All Stars.
 -  But in mainstream jazz, the 7th chord is king - major 7ths for I or tonic chords, dominant 7ths for V chords, minor 7ths for II and VI chords.
 -  Despite the fact that the soloists just use these two chords, the improvisations are melodically and rhythmically rich - a signpost of contemporary mainstream jazz.
 -  I play the piano, so it is natural for me to think ‘harmonically’ a lot of the time (one can hear harmonies instantly on a piano; also mainstream jazz is extremely harmony driven).
 -  Shivava will host traditional jazz music and the Bassline will showcase mainstream jazz.
 -  For, to judge by the number and amount of record sales of older jazz, there are plenty of lovers of mainstream jazz out there.
 -  The oldest jazz club in the world is Village Vanguard cellar jazz club, opened in New York City, USA, in 1935, and host to mainstream jazz concerts ever since.
 -  These harmonies, however, fit into the jazz idiom just as bop made its way into the mainstream, enriching both.
 -  The music I heard in my house was my parents' music, which was swing music, jazz, very mainstream jazz nothing esoteric - the usual people like Ella Fitzgerald, [and] Judy Garland.
 -  Sure, this album is miles away from free jazz, and I apologize for it, but I also have my sentimental side which appreciates top level mainstream jazz.
 -  The CD comprises 13 tunes from mainstream through Cape jazz and goema to hip-hop.
 -  Contemporary mainstream jazz artists use, for the most part, Hard Bop instrumentation and musical forms.
 
  
 
 adjective ˈmeɪnstriːmˈmeɪnˌstrim 1Belonging to or characteristic of the mainstream. 主流的 主流政治。 Example sentencesExamples -  As the 70s dawned, mainstream black music made those sentiments explicit.
 -  You will almost never hear any American political figure described by the mainstream media as belonging the left wing.
 -  The recent European elections revealed a deep disaffection with mainstream politics.
 -  You're certainly not an indie or alternative artist, but you're not completely about to take over mainstream music either.
 -  Taylor doesn't expect blue laser technology to become mainstream until around 2008.
 -  And this is a play, daring though it may be, that belongs in a mainstream house.
 -  It's clear that working people no longer have a voice in mainstream politics in this country.
 -  But when mainstream, everyday Americans became opposed to the Vietnam War, it stopped.
 -  But Boyle could never get enthused about mainstream politics.
 -  Analysts and IT boffins are confident that the technology is going to be mainstream before very long.
 -  It has, therefore, created its own icons, which apparently have to be those good-looking mainstream artists.
 -  In today's age, many of those beliefs are in some ways formed or influenced via the mainstream media.
 -  Corn argues that much of the fault belongs to the mainstream media, which is loath to call any president a liar.
 -  You want your technology to become mainstream as fast as possible so that you can, in effect, share development costs.
 -  Both came from mainstream ranching traditions and initially recoiled at the new philosophy.
 -  But they want to lead people back to the passivity and compromise of mainstream politics.
 -  The things in this bill are absolutely mainstream in modern transport planning.
 -  In short, modern mainstream economics is in a state of total confusion.
 -  Traditional French staples, including baguettes, are mainstream in the cities.
 -  In online interviews, some point to a feeling of alienation from mainstream organized religion.
 
 Synonyms normal, conventional, ordinary, orthodox, conformist, accepted, established, recognized, common, usual, prevailing, popular US informal, derogatory lamestream - 1.1 (of a school or class) for pupils without special needs.
(学校,班级)为无特殊需求学生开设的,普通的  the state government has supported greater integration of students with disabilities into mainstream schools Example sentencesExamples -  Heads are now permitted to exclude difficult pupils from mainstream classes for a maximum of 15 days.
 -  Yet, as female students move into mainstream classes, their peer groups often change.
 -  What's missing in this class, compared to a class in a mainstream school, is any sense of interaction between the children.
 -  She's in seventh grade, at a mainstream school that has special education classes.
 -  He also blamed a lack of support for difficult pupils remaining in mainstream schools, an inappropriate curriculum and teacher shortages.
 -  The reorganisation includes an increased emphasis on children with less severe special needs pupils going into mainstream schools.
 -  She recommended our son be included within a mainstream school where a pupil had assaulted him.
 -  Several people feared putting special schools and mainstream schools on one site would lead to bullying of disabled children.
 -  The aim of the project was to learn from the experiences of pupils in both special educational and mainstream schools.
 -  Borough education chiefs want more integration between mainstream schools and special schools.
 -  ELL students do not clump in the Enrichment Academy classes nearly as much as they might in a mainstream class.
 -  Again, the guidance urges the quick re-integration of pupils into mainstream schools.
 -  All participants were enrolled in ESL classes and spent at least a portion of their school day in mainstream classes.
 -  This plan is for a mainstream school for 210 pupils and a nursery school.
 -  Their development in English language should be comparable to that of students in mainstream schools.
 -  But Ms Drown says it would be even more expensive to educate pupils at mainstream schools or at schools outside the borough.
 -  The decision not to educate a pupil in a mainstream school - against their parent's wishes - should not be taken lightly.
 -  Most mainstream schools in the UK follow a national curriculum, teaching A Levels and the relatively new AS Level.
 -  The current goal is English dominance sufficient for students to participate in mainstream classes within one year.
 -  The government has made it clear that it wishes to see more special needs children entering mainstream schools.
 
  
 
 verb ˈmeɪnstriːmˈmeɪnˌstrim [with object]Bring into the mainstream. 使进入主流;使成为主流  vegetarianism has been mainstreamed 素食主义已经成为主流。 Example sentencesExamples -  Now, we think mainstreaming the services that are provided will produce a much, much better result.
 -  But because my commitment is to mainstreaming astrology, I think it would be very confusing to the public if I started discussing other techniques.
 -  Lileks suggests that Democrats are mainstreaming the extreme.
 -  These are aimed at mainstreaming intercultural education into the entire curriculum and developing strategies to combat racist behaviour.
 -  The shift from WID to GAD then, at least for Peace Corps, meant mainstreaming women's issues.
 -  Murray Bowen is responsible for mainstreaming family therapy.
 -  The strategies outlined by Mary Robinson, the UNHCHR, are commonly described as mainstreaming human rights.
 -  But I don't see how mainstreaming indigenous programs, where mainstream has failed.
 -  It's a good lesson: if you want to mainstream yourself, you can't do things that make you look like a raving maniac.
 -  I'm sort of mainstreaming myself back into the normal beats of human life.
 -  The Fair Trade Fiesta helps mark the start of the new phase in mainstreaming Fair Trade in New Zealand.
 -  They are mainstreaming and forming coalitions in countries like Denmark and Italy.
 -  The beauty of mainstreaming anything is that anyone who belongs to the community that is being mainstreamed now has more freedom to be exactly who they are.
 -  What would have been considered ‘gay’ before is mainstreaming.
 -  The award's presenters noted that in a nation known for its heavy dependence on coal, Rizhao represents an inspiring example of the mainstreaming of renewable energy sources.
 -  He said support groups and agencies have already been mainstreaming in the absence of a national framework.
 -  On the whole, though, the 1950s and 1960s were times of further mainstreaming for the Cajuns.
 -  But he's mainstreaming the fringe while he's at it.
 -  Ever since Napster mainstreamed unauthorized sharing of copyrighted materials, record labels have been singing the blues - and for pretty obvious reasons.
 -  Similarly, there is a need for mainstreaming considerations of gender, age and occupation in the national nutrition strategy.
 
    Definition of mainstream in US English: mainstreamnounˈmeɪnˌstrimˈmānˌstrēm the mainstream1The ideas, attitudes, or activities that are regarded as normal or conventional; the dominant trend in opinion, fashion, or the arts. 主流;主要倾向  companies that are bringing computers to the mainstream of American life Example sentencesExamples -  These attitudes place you outside the mainstream markets we wish to service.
 -  I don't think they want a major confrontation when they are desperate to enter the mainstream of politics.
 -  He has a special interest in attempting to convey academic ideas to the mainstream, perhaps through print journalism.
 -  Its attitudes to women also place it outside the mainstream.
 -  In fact, Linux is nowhere near the mainstream of computer desktop operating systems.
 -  What this means is that only certain people can find a forum for their ideas in the mainstream and media.
 -  The overwhelming message carried by the mainstream is that corporate activities are largely benign and certainly not worth systematic investigation.
 -  Before computers entered the mainstream, talented programmers were rare.
 -  Crucially, these ideas were not developed in the mainstream of political discourse but on the margins and then popularised.
 -  By leaving the GOP, Buchanan marginalized himself from the mainstream of American politics.
 -  Penrose veers into irony in the lengths to which he goes to point out where his ideas deviate from the mainstream.
 -  There's a lot of symbiosis between the activists and the mainstream.
 -  We know blogging has hit the mainstream for sure when companies are trying to make a profit on what started as a grass-roots effort.
 -  Education policy often leads the way to integrate new ideas into the mainstream.
 -  If you can't, it only indicates the extent to which your views are way out of the mainstream of American politics.
 -  We predict whether the mainstream will adapt those attitudes or not.
 -  Prior to independence, tropical forest foragers remained outside the mainstream of society and politics.
 -  The problem is, the ideas push into the mainstream of politics, and here we have a problem.
 -  As they point out, the disease of neo-conservatism is more in the mainstream of American politics than many would like to admit.
 -  But this year the list is five years old, and Porter's ideas have joined the mainstream.
 
 - 1.1 Jazz that is neither traditional nor modern, based on the 1930s swing style and consisting especially of solo improvisation on chord sequences.
主流派爵士乐(既非传统风格又非现代风格的爵士乐,以20世纪30年代的强节奏爵士音乐风格为基础,主要由和弦横进形式的即兴独奏构成) Example sentencesExamples -  I play the piano, so it is natural for me to think ‘harmonically’ a lot of the time (one can hear harmonies instantly on a piano; also mainstream jazz is extremely harmony driven).
 -  Despite the fact that the soloists just use these two chords, the improvisations are melodically and rhythmically rich - a signpost of contemporary mainstream jazz.
 -  The music I heard in my house was my parents' music, which was swing music, jazz, very mainstream jazz nothing esoteric - the usual people like Ella Fitzgerald, [and] Judy Garland.
 -  But in mainstream jazz, the 7th chord is king - major 7ths for I or tonic chords, dominant 7ths for V chords, minor 7ths for II and VI chords.
 -  ‘The music is mostly traditional jazz, Dixieland and mainstream jazz,’ said Mr Frank, a double-bass player who took to the stage himself with his Dixieland All Stars.
 -  The oldest jazz club in the world is Village Vanguard cellar jazz club, opened in New York City, USA, in 1935, and host to mainstream jazz concerts ever since.
 -  These harmonies, however, fit into the jazz idiom just as bop made its way into the mainstream, enriching both.
 -  Contemporary mainstream jazz artists use, for the most part, Hard Bop instrumentation and musical forms.
 -  Almost all mainstream jazz is in 4/4-four strums to the bar.
 -  For, to judge by the number and amount of record sales of older jazz, there are plenty of lovers of mainstream jazz out there.
 -  Sure, this album is miles away from free jazz, and I apologize for it, but I also have my sentimental side which appreciates top level mainstream jazz.
 -  KSDS is a 24-hour mainstream jazz radio station, licensed to the San Diego Community College District.
 -  The CD comprises 13 tunes from mainstream through Cape jazz and goema to hip-hop.
 -  Shivava will host traditional jazz music and the Bassline will showcase mainstream jazz.
 
  
 
 adjectiveˈmeɪnˌstrimˈmānˌstrēm 1Belonging to or characteristic of the mainstream. 主流的 主流政治。  a mixture of mainstream and avant-garde artists 主流派艺术家和先锋派艺术家的混合。 Example sentencesExamples -  But Boyle could never get enthused about mainstream politics.
 -  The recent European elections revealed a deep disaffection with mainstream politics.
 -  Corn argues that much of the fault belongs to the mainstream media, which is loath to call any president a liar.
 -  It has, therefore, created its own icons, which apparently have to be those good-looking mainstream artists.
 -  Both came from mainstream ranching traditions and initially recoiled at the new philosophy.
 -  But they want to lead people back to the passivity and compromise of mainstream politics.
 -  Traditional French staples, including baguettes, are mainstream in the cities.
 -  It's clear that working people no longer have a voice in mainstream politics in this country.
 -  You're certainly not an indie or alternative artist, but you're not completely about to take over mainstream music either.
 -  In today's age, many of those beliefs are in some ways formed or influenced via the mainstream media.
 -  Analysts and IT boffins are confident that the technology is going to be mainstream before very long.
 -  But when mainstream, everyday Americans became opposed to the Vietnam War, it stopped.
 -  Taylor doesn't expect blue laser technology to become mainstream until around 2008.
 -  You will almost never hear any American political figure described by the mainstream media as belonging the left wing.
 -  You want your technology to become mainstream as fast as possible so that you can, in effect, share development costs.
 -  The things in this bill are absolutely mainstream in modern transport planning.
 -  In online interviews, some point to a feeling of alienation from mainstream organized religion.
 -  As the 70s dawned, mainstream black music made those sentiments explicit.
 -  And this is a play, daring though it may be, that belongs in a mainstream house.
 -  In short, modern mainstream economics is in a state of total confusion.
 
 Synonyms normal, conventional, ordinary, orthodox, conformist, accepted, established, recognized, common, usual, prevailing, popular - 1.1 (of a school or class) for students without special needs.
(学校,班级)为无特殊需求学生开设的,普通的  the state government has supported greater integration of students with disabilities into mainstream schools Example sentencesExamples -  All participants were enrolled in ESL classes and spent at least a portion of their school day in mainstream classes.
 -  She recommended our son be included within a mainstream school where a pupil had assaulted him.
 -  Most mainstream schools in the UK follow a national curriculum, teaching A Levels and the relatively new AS Level.
 -  The aim of the project was to learn from the experiences of pupils in both special educational and mainstream schools.
 -  The reorganisation includes an increased emphasis on children with less severe special needs pupils going into mainstream schools.
 -  Again, the guidance urges the quick re-integration of pupils into mainstream schools.
 -  But Ms Drown says it would be even more expensive to educate pupils at mainstream schools or at schools outside the borough.
 -  ELL students do not clump in the Enrichment Academy classes nearly as much as they might in a mainstream class.
 -  What's missing in this class, compared to a class in a mainstream school, is any sense of interaction between the children.
 -  She's in seventh grade, at a mainstream school that has special education classes.
 -  The current goal is English dominance sufficient for students to participate in mainstream classes within one year.
 -  Heads are now permitted to exclude difficult pupils from mainstream classes for a maximum of 15 days.
 -  He also blamed a lack of support for difficult pupils remaining in mainstream schools, an inappropriate curriculum and teacher shortages.
 -  Borough education chiefs want more integration between mainstream schools and special schools.
 -  Yet, as female students move into mainstream classes, their peer groups often change.
 -  Their development in English language should be comparable to that of students in mainstream schools.
 -  The government has made it clear that it wishes to see more special needs children entering mainstream schools.
 -  Several people feared putting special schools and mainstream schools on one site would lead to bullying of disabled children.
 -  This plan is for a mainstream school for 210 pupils and a nursery school.
 -  The decision not to educate a pupil in a mainstream school - against their parent's wishes - should not be taken lightly.
 
  
 
 verbˈmeɪnˌstrimˈmānˌstrēm [with object]1Bring (something) into the mainstream. 使进入主流;使成为主流  vegetarianism has been mainstreamed 素食主义已经成为主流。 Example sentencesExamples -  Now, we think mainstreaming the services that are provided will produce a much, much better result.
 -  Ever since Napster mainstreamed unauthorized sharing of copyrighted materials, record labels have been singing the blues - and for pretty obvious reasons.
 -  But because my commitment is to mainstreaming astrology, I think it would be very confusing to the public if I started discussing other techniques.
 -  The strategies outlined by Mary Robinson, the UNHCHR, are commonly described as mainstreaming human rights.
 -  Murray Bowen is responsible for mainstreaming family therapy.
 -  But he's mainstreaming the fringe while he's at it.
 -  Lileks suggests that Democrats are mainstreaming the extreme.
 -  What would have been considered ‘gay’ before is mainstreaming.
 -  These are aimed at mainstreaming intercultural education into the entire curriculum and developing strategies to combat racist behaviour.
 -  The award's presenters noted that in a nation known for its heavy dependence on coal, Rizhao represents an inspiring example of the mainstreaming of renewable energy sources.
 -  He said support groups and agencies have already been mainstreaming in the absence of a national framework.
 -  But I don't see how mainstreaming indigenous programs, where mainstream has failed.
 -  They are mainstreaming and forming coalitions in countries like Denmark and Italy.
 -  It's a good lesson: if you want to mainstream yourself, you can't do things that make you look like a raving maniac.
 -  The beauty of mainstreaming anything is that anyone who belongs to the community that is being mainstreamed now has more freedom to be exactly who they are.
 -  I'm sort of mainstreaming myself back into the normal beats of human life.
 -  Similarly, there is a need for mainstreaming considerations of gender, age and occupation in the national nutrition strategy.
 -  The Fair Trade Fiesta helps mark the start of the new phase in mainstreaming Fair Trade in New Zealand.
 -  On the whole, though, the 1950s and 1960s were times of further mainstreaming for the Cajuns.
 -  The shift from WID to GAD then, at least for Peace Corps, meant mainstreaming women's issues.
 
 - 1.1 Place (a student with special needs) into a mainstream class or school.
 the goal is to have the child mainstreamed into a regular classroom Example sentencesExamples -  Parents described whether the child was currently fully included, partially mainstreamed, or in a special day class without mainstreaming.
 -  Those students who showed rapid signs of progress were mainstreamed in one or more classes.
 -  She was in special ed from pre-school until she was mainstreamed in fourth grade.
 -  Students are mainstreamed into all English classrooms, in many cases at the end of first grade, until their English proficiency is sufficient enough to follow instruction.
 -  For traditional-age college students, being encouraged to take an ESL class was more difficult to accept if they had been mainstreamed in high school.
 -  When special-needs children are mainstreamed into a classroom, we examine their fish-out-of-water struggles.
 -  Around six lakh children would be deprived of a chance to be mainstreamed into regular schools this year.
 -  I had a student who was mainstreamed and the teacher called me almost every day.
 -  It helps these special children to be mainstreamed and to interact on an equal platform.
 -  Reverted to teenagers and mainstreamed with normal kids in a normal high school adds a whole new dimension to these characters.
 -  Where necessary for educational reasons, mainstreaming students assumes a subordinate role in formulating an educational program.
 -  It was chosen because its students are not mainstreamed abruptly into all-English instruction but receive instructional support in the native language through Grade 5.
 -  These kids become Cindy's friends and help her learn important lessons about inclusion, labeling, mainstreaming, and retardation.
 -  Students with special needs are mainstreamed into the regular classroom whenever possible, but additional education services also are provided.
 -  The goal is to have the child mainstreamed into a regular classroom, although an aide may be necessary to keep the child focused.
 -  At times, female students who leave ESL classes and are completely mainstreamed lose their in-group status with female students who remain in ESL classes.
 -  This method of transferring information is beneficial for the special education students who are mainstreamed into my art classes.
 -  This was an early forerunner of the programmes developed some twenty years later for mainstreaming disabled children.
 -  When they reach Step 2, students are mainstreamed in reading.
 
  
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