| 释义 | 
		Definition of Yanqui in English: Yanquinoun ˈjaŋkiˈyaNGkē variant spelling of Yankee, typically used in Latin American contexts Example sentencesExamples -  Or a lot of people consider him a holy man, a prophet, and a hero, and they don't want your filthy Yanqui money anyway.
 -  Can I just say as a Yanqui, that I'm in constant amazement at the idea of a show running from the early 70s to the mid 80s, yet only having twenty-odd episodes?
 -  Indicative of the plight of the economy, in August 1993 Cuba amended its constitution to allow its citizens to deal in the hated Yanqui dollar.
 -  If we allow this to happen, we Yanquis will pay the price - in terms of economics, drugs and immigration - for years to come.
 -  No wonder that some Mexicans resent Yanquis, or that, as DePalma observes, ‘even today anxiety [about the U.S.] lingers, at least subconsciously, in the minds of some Canadians.’
 -  We also see the brutal foreman of mining company (backed up, no doubt, by Yanqui financing), arrogantly selecting the ill-paid crew of the day while brusquely warning the city boys off company property.
 -  Now, heraldry is one of the quaint, meaningless traditions (not unlike the House of Lords itself, come to think of it) that so enthralls Yanqui Anglophiles like myself.
 -  ‘Get out of the car, Yanqui,’ the short, balding taxi driver demanded.
 -  This may have been a tacit warning to foreign, mainly Yanqui, architects, not to presume to apply their brand of monument to Havana.
 -  A thousand miles north of the present border, we were already in what used to be Mexico before the Invasión Yanqui.
 -  But Castro stood up to everything the Yanquis threw his way: a CIA-trained exile army foiled at the Bay of Pigs in 1961, numerous assassination attempts, a US embargo that is still in effect.
 -  And, though they may have eventually exited, they left a greater mark than the Yanqui did in Mexico.
 -  No matter what the approach, drastic measures are needed to stem the latest tide of Yanqui imperialism.
 -  You don't even have to have any connections to the UK - I know some nice Canuckistanis and Yanquis have been here.
 -  Plan Colombia has finally given Farc some credibility in its claim to be fighting for ‘national liberation against Yanqui imperialism’.
 
    Definition of Yanqui in US English: YanquinounˈyaNGkē variant spelling of Yankee, typically used in Latin American contexts Example sentencesExamples -  This may have been a tacit warning to foreign, mainly Yanqui, architects, not to presume to apply their brand of monument to Havana.
 -  And, though they may have eventually exited, they left a greater mark than the Yanqui did in Mexico.
 -  We also see the brutal foreman of mining company (backed up, no doubt, by Yanqui financing), arrogantly selecting the ill-paid crew of the day while brusquely warning the city boys off company property.
 -  Indicative of the plight of the economy, in August 1993 Cuba amended its constitution to allow its citizens to deal in the hated Yanqui dollar.
 -  Or a lot of people consider him a holy man, a prophet, and a hero, and they don't want your filthy Yanqui money anyway.
 -  You don't even have to have any connections to the UK - I know some nice Canuckistanis and Yanquis have been here.
 -  No matter what the approach, drastic measures are needed to stem the latest tide of Yanqui imperialism.
 -  Can I just say as a Yanqui, that I'm in constant amazement at the idea of a show running from the early 70s to the mid 80s, yet only having twenty-odd episodes?
 -  A thousand miles north of the present border, we were already in what used to be Mexico before the Invasión Yanqui.
 -  ‘Get out of the car, Yanqui,’ the short, balding taxi driver demanded.
 -  Now, heraldry is one of the quaint, meaningless traditions (not unlike the House of Lords itself, come to think of it) that so enthralls Yanqui Anglophiles like myself.
 -  If we allow this to happen, we Yanquis will pay the price - in terms of economics, drugs and immigration - for years to come.
 -  No wonder that some Mexicans resent Yanquis, or that, as DePalma observes, ‘even today anxiety [about the U.S.] lingers, at least subconsciously, in the minds of some Canadians.’
 -  Plan Colombia has finally given Farc some credibility in its claim to be fighting for ‘national liberation against Yanqui imperialism’.
 -  But Castro stood up to everything the Yanquis threw his way: a CIA-trained exile army foiled at the Bay of Pigs in 1961, numerous assassination attempts, a US embargo that is still in effect.
 
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