| 释义 | 
		Definition of clique in English: cliquenoun kliːk A small close-knit group of people who do not readily allow others to join them.  his flat became a haven for a clique of young men of similar tastes Example sentencesExamples -  It must also avoid cultural cliques and the editor must be ‘free and untrammelled’ by any committee or board.
 -  I had no idea that the smartest of the Indiana population had cliques.
 -  Its reputation in recent years has been that of a party dominated by small elite cliques.
 -  Strangers become friends, friends become cliques and cliques become vast drinking scenes.
 -  The tension is mostly created by Caz, Jules and Hen; their clique is the one the other girls most wish to join.
 -  There was never supposed to be any hierarchy in her classroom; no cliques were allowed.
 -  In our close-knit cliques we gossip about a variety of topics even though we complain about the parents who do it.
 -  The prestige and appeal of their manners radiated far beyond the exclusive social cliques of Damascus itself.
 -  The West generally ignored its own cultural cliques, who were regarded as peripheral and of no consequence to political events.
 -  At that time, he hadn't joined any of the cliques he could have, staying alone, talking to a few other guys at a minimum level.
 -  It was found that certain cliques of countries within the same geographic region, like Greece and Cyprus, are likely to vote similarly.
 -  I'm guessing that flying scene there resolves around individual cliques that communicate in private.
 -  Kellin always had these mixed up schemes to try and pull her into the popular clique.
 -  Cliques can be bad, when cliques start ganging up on other cliques, making mountains into molehills.
 -  I hope that you all will get to know him and allow him to join our wonderful clique.
 -  The hopes of the people have been dashed too many times to believe that they can rid the country of the ruling clique with the ballot.
 -  Not surprisingly, the school is as bad as the city; there are numerous gangs and cliques.
 -  Interestingly, cliques generally became less integrated as the number of minorities rose.
 -  There he catered to couples, snazzy middle-aged divorced female cliques and peevish teenagers.
 -  This procedure identified 13 distinct cliques over the course of the observation period.
 
 Synonyms coterie, circle, inner circle, crowd, in-crowd, set, group pack, band, ring, mob, crew club, society, fraternity, sorority, fellowship camp cartel, cabal, junta, caucus, cell, lobby Australian/New Zealand push informal gang, bunch rare camarilla 
 Derivativesadjective ˈkliːkɪʃ (of a group or place) tending to form or hold exclusive groups and so not welcoming to outsiders.  a notoriously cliquish political club Example sentencesExamples - They stand for upper-class, cliquish snobbery.
 - The intensity of Louis' initial physical attraction to her allowed Pompadour to adapt to the extraordinarily cliquish and exclusive atmosphere of Versailles.
 - Then around 12 or 13, kids get cliquish and cruel and that disgusted me.
 
 
 nounˈkliːkɪʃnəs A new social system starts, and seems delightfully free of the elitism and cliquishness of the existing systems. Example sentencesExamples - Small world networks exhibit local cliquishness while exhibiting strong global connectivity.
 - Not only would the overlapping of communities be encouraged but the cliquishness that plagues this campus will, hopefully, begin to be phased out.
 
 
 
 OriginEarly 18th century: from French, from Old French cliquer 'make a noise'; the modern sense is related to claque. Rhymesantique, batik, beak, bespeak, bezique, bleak, boutique, cacique, caïque, cheek, chic, creak, creek, critique, Dominique, eke, freak, geek, Greek, hide-and-seek, keek, Lalique, leak, leek, Martinique, meek, midweek, Mozambique, Mustique, mystique, oblique, opéra comique, ortanique, peak, Peake, peek, physique, pique, pratique, reek, seek, shriek, Sikh, sleek, sneak, speak, Speke, squeak, streak, teak, technique, tongue-in-cheek, tweak, unique, veronique, weak, week, wreak    Definition of clique in US English: cliquenoun A small group of people, with shared interests or other features in common, who spend time together and do not readily allow others to join them. 派系,小集团,小圈子,小团体 Example sentencesExamples -  Cliques can be bad, when cliques start ganging up on other cliques, making mountains into molehills.
 -  The tension is mostly created by Caz, Jules and Hen; their clique is the one the other girls most wish to join.
 -  There he catered to couples, snazzy middle-aged divorced female cliques and peevish teenagers.
 -  Strangers become friends, friends become cliques and cliques become vast drinking scenes.
 -  The prestige and appeal of their manners radiated far beyond the exclusive social cliques of Damascus itself.
 -  Interestingly, cliques generally became less integrated as the number of minorities rose.
 -  The West generally ignored its own cultural cliques, who were regarded as peripheral and of no consequence to political events.
 -  There was never supposed to be any hierarchy in her classroom; no cliques were allowed.
 -  It must also avoid cultural cliques and the editor must be ‘free and untrammelled’ by any committee or board.
 -  The hopes of the people have been dashed too many times to believe that they can rid the country of the ruling clique with the ballot.
 -  Kellin always had these mixed up schemes to try and pull her into the popular clique.
 -  I had no idea that the smartest of the Indiana population had cliques.
 -  Its reputation in recent years has been that of a party dominated by small elite cliques.
 -  I hope that you all will get to know him and allow him to join our wonderful clique.
 -  In our close-knit cliques we gossip about a variety of topics even though we complain about the parents who do it.
 -  Not surprisingly, the school is as bad as the city; there are numerous gangs and cliques.
 -  At that time, he hadn't joined any of the cliques he could have, staying alone, talking to a few other guys at a minimum level.
 -  This procedure identified 13 distinct cliques over the course of the observation period.
 -  I'm guessing that flying scene there resolves around individual cliques that communicate in private.
 -  It was found that certain cliques of countries within the same geographic region, like Greece and Cyprus, are likely to vote similarly.
 
 Synonyms coterie, circle, inner circle, crowd, in-crowd, set, group 
 OriginEarly 18th century: from French, from Old French cliquer ‘make a noise’; the modern sense is related to claque.     |