| 释义 | 
		Definition of culture war in English: culture warnoun A conflict between groups with different ideals, beliefs, philosophies, etc. 文化战争(理想、信念、哲学等方面有分歧的团体之间的冲突)  a culture war between the revivalists and anti-revivalists Example sentencesExamples -  Now name one battle in the culture war in which he was instrumental in attaining a victory for our side.
 -  Despite denials by some that any such conflict exists, the culture war is an obtrusive fact.
 -  At the root of the culture war is a conflict between theism and atheism.
 -  In that sense, the battles for serious music are part of a wider culture war apparent at various levels of modern Scotland.
 -  If we are in a culture war, and it seems pretty clear that we are, then I expect that every president from now until that war ends will be hated by the other side.
 -  But be prepared for another fierce battle in the culture war.
 -  An underlying objection to such slave redemption projects appears to lie in a culture war between secular and religious activism.
 -  Before exploring how the second Battle of Lexington typifies the larger culture war, it is useful to sketch the specific conflict.
 -  As he contends, the culture war is ultimately fought in political institutions, not in the attitudes found in surveys.
 -  On this view, then, the culture war rests on different assessments of the modern liberal tradition.
 -  If settlers turn on soldiers who have come to evict them, it will not look like a culture war - but a civil war.
 -  Along the way, we'll have to work through the culture war at home.
 -  This is not a culture war; it is the cultural equivalent of hiding in the trenches and putting up enough sandbags to keep the enemy at a safe distance.
 -  The culture war, like a flower war, is meant to thin the ranks of the people who trigger these feelings.
 -  It is really a culture war that has nothing to do with creating a safer society.
 -  And the result is that on race, both law and culture work very hard not to avoid but to win the culture war.
 -  Perhaps the next war we need to launch is a new culture war in the West, to decide what values and ambitions we might be prepared to stand and fight for - and against.
 -  What strikes me most about the underlying ‘story’ is the sheer breathless viciousness of the culture war.
 -  It came smack in the middle of the relevant culture war.
 -  Like the culture war in American society, this conflict is ultimately about control.
 
    Definition of culture war in US English: culture warnoun A conflict between groups with different ideals, beliefs, philosophies, etc. 文化战争(理想、信念、哲学等方面有分歧的团体之间的冲突)  a culture war between the revivalists and antirevivalists Example sentencesExamples -  Like the culture war in American society, this conflict is ultimately about control.
 -  If we are in a culture war, and it seems pretty clear that we are, then I expect that every president from now until that war ends will be hated by the other side.
 -  As he contends, the culture war is ultimately fought in political institutions, not in the attitudes found in surveys.
 -  Before exploring how the second Battle of Lexington typifies the larger culture war, it is useful to sketch the specific conflict.
 -  An underlying objection to such slave redemption projects appears to lie in a culture war between secular and religious activism.
 -  On this view, then, the culture war rests on different assessments of the modern liberal tradition.
 -  Now name one battle in the culture war in which he was instrumental in attaining a victory for our side.
 -  It came smack in the middle of the relevant culture war.
 -  Despite denials by some that any such conflict exists, the culture war is an obtrusive fact.
 -  Along the way, we'll have to work through the culture war at home.
 -  Perhaps the next war we need to launch is a new culture war in the West, to decide what values and ambitions we might be prepared to stand and fight for - and against.
 -  At the root of the culture war is a conflict between theism and atheism.
 -  This is not a culture war; it is the cultural equivalent of hiding in the trenches and putting up enough sandbags to keep the enemy at a safe distance.
 -  It is really a culture war that has nothing to do with creating a safer society.
 -  If settlers turn on soldiers who have come to evict them, it will not look like a culture war - but a civil war.
 -  The culture war, like a flower war, is meant to thin the ranks of the people who trigger these feelings.
 -  But be prepared for another fierce battle in the culture war.
 -  What strikes me most about the underlying ‘story’ is the sheer breathless viciousness of the culture war.
 -  In that sense, the battles for serious music are part of a wider culture war apparent at various levels of modern Scotland.
 -  And the result is that on race, both law and culture work very hard not to avoid but to win the culture war.
 
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