globalist
globalist — 名詞
- globalistsingular
- globalistsplural
1. a person who believes countries should cooperate on trade, politics, and major c
全球主義者
認為國際合作比國家利益更重要的人
a person who believes countries should cooperate on trade, politics, and major challenges, putting shared global interests ahead of narrow national ones
Jenna described herself as a globalist and pushed for open borders at the summit.
Jenna 在峰會上自稱是全球主義者,並推動開放邊界政策。
reflexive + as-pattern: described herself as a globalist
Gabriel's opponents labelled him a globalist who cared more about treaties than towns.
Gabriel 的反對者指責他是全球主義者,關心條約勝過城鎮。
pattern: label + object + a globalist who [clause]
The prime minister, a committed globalist, signed the climate accord without hesitation.
那位首相是堅定的全球主義者,毫不猶豫地簽署了氣候協定。
At the Geneva trade talks, Ambassador Keiko argued like a true globalist for lower tariffs.
在日內瓦貿易談判中,大使 Keiko 像個真正的全球主義者一樣,主張降低關稅。
Lien's father called her a naive globalist for wanting to send aid overseas.
Lien 的父親說她是天真的全球主義者,竟然想把援助送到海外。
- internationalist
broader term, often used for socialist or labour movements across borders, not only economic policy
- cosmopolitan
more about cultural openness and worldliness than political or economic ideology
- one-worlder
more idealistic and sometimes dismissive; suggests a belief in a single world government
- nationalist
prioritises the interests of one's own nation above international cooperation
- protectionist
specifically opposes free trade and open markets across borders
- isolationist
favours keeping one's country out of foreign alliances and conflicts entirely
用法筆記
Often used in political debate; can carry a negative tone when employed by critics who see globalism as disregarding local or national concerns. The label is more common in opinion writing than in neutral news reporting.