red state

IPA/ˈred ˌsteɪt/
IPA/ˈred ˌsteɪt/

red state — noun

1. a US state whose voters tend to support Republican Party candidates more often t

1.名詞B2
釋義

a US state whose voters tend to support Republican Party candidates more often than Democratic ones in presidential and other major elections

例句

Texas has been a solid red state in every presidential election since 1980.

solid + red state = strong Republican majority

The senator campaigned hard across the red state, hoping to keep the seat for the GOP.

同義詞
  • Republican state

    more transparent; can be used interchangeably in most contexts

  • GOP state

    informal; uses the Republican Party's nickname, Grand Old Party

  • conservative state

    broader meaning; also refers to social and cultural leaning, not just voting pattern

反義詞
  • blue state

    direct opposite; a US state where most people vote Democratic

  • swing state

    contrasting category; a state that could vote for either party, not firmly red or blue

用法筆記

The terms 'red state' and 'blue state' became common during the 2000 US presidential election, when television news networks used red for Republican-leaning states and blue for Democratic-leaning ones on their electoral maps. A state's colour designation can change over time as voting patterns shift.

常見錯誤

It is a red colored state.
It is a red state.
💡'red state' is a fixed compound noun; do not add extra adjectives like 'colored'.
Red states are the ones that vote for the Democratic Party.
Red states are the ones that vote for the Republican Party.
💡in US political colour coding, red = Republican, blue = Democrat.