voting
/ˈvəʊtɪŋ/ (bre, ipa) · /ˈvəʊtɪŋ/ (ame, ipa)
voting — 名詞
1. the act of making a choice between candidates or proposals by raising your hand,
投票
在選舉或會議中表達選擇的過程
the act of making a choice between candidates or proposals by raising your hand, marking a ballot paper, or using an electronic machine, especially during an election
The voting for the new class representative starts at ten o'clock tomorrow morning.
新班級代表的投票於明天早上十點開始。
Voting by mail has become much more popular in recent years.
郵寄投票在近幾年變得越來越受歡迎。
collocation: voting by [method] (by mail / by phone / online)
After the voting finished, Salma and her friends went to celebrate their candidate's win.
投票結束後,Salma 和朋友們一起去慶祝她們支持的候選人獲勝。
Many older citizens prefer traditional voting with paper ballots at local schools.
許多年長公民更喜歡在當地學校用紙本選票進行傳統投票。
Christopher has been checking the voting results posted on the town website.
Christopher 一直在查看鎮公所網站上公布的投票結果。
- vote
vote can be used as a countable noun for a single instance ('each person has one vote'), while voting is the general uncountable process
- ballot
ballot refers specifically to the secret voting process or the paper/machine used to record choices, and is more formal
- poll
poll can mean the voting process itself ('the polls close at 8 PM') or a survey of opinions ('opinion poll')
- abstention
abstention is the deliberate choice not to vote, the opposite of participating in voting
用法筆記
This noun is uncountable; you cannot say 'a voting' or 'votings'. Use 'a vote' (countable) for a single instance, or the verb 'to vote' for the action performed by one person.