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 rapport [ræ'pɒ:]   添加此单词到默认生词本
n. 关系, 融洽, 一致

[医] 关系, 协调(病人与医师间), 感通(唯心的灵交术时)




    rapport
    [ noun ]
    a relationship of mutual understanding or trust and agreement between people
    <noun.linkdef>


    Rapport \Rap*port"\ (r[a^]p*p[=o]rt"; F. r[.a]`p[^o]r"), n. [F.,
    fr. rapporter to bring again or back, to refer; pref. re- re-
    + apporter to bring, L. apportare. Cf. {Report}.]
    Relation; proportion; conformity; correspondence; accord.

    'T is obvious what rapport there is between the
    conceptions and languages in every country. --Sir W.
    Temple.

    {En` rap`port"} ([aum]N` r[.a]`p[^o]r") [F.], in accord,
    harmony, or sympathy; having a mutual, especially a
    private, understanding; in mesmerism, in that relation of
    sympathy which permits influence or communication.

    1. "His people would expect it (his return) and he is just the sort of person who would do it," Mrs. Thatcher said of Gorbachev, with whom she has a good rapport.
    2. She is not, of course, Charles Mackerras or Bernard Haitink or Mark Elder; she brings her own eager rush to the score, but one misses Janacek's serene warmth and breadth (and any intimate rapport with the singers).
    3. A better option, some suggest, is for the U.S. to redouble its efforts to build rapport with Mr. Hussein despite his bluster.
    4. Aides say Bentsen did not take part in the talks between Dukakis and Jackson, although he did have two candid telephone conversations with Jackson last week that aides say enabled Jackson and Bentsen to establish a good rapport.
    5. He aligned himself unapologetically with the President's politics, while leaving sufficient openings to shape a future consistent with his own personal beliefs, building a personal rapport with the American citizenry.
    6. Uncomfortable in parliament and before western investors, Mr Horn nevertheless shows a real rapport with crowds that is rare among east European politicians.
    7. British officials are banking on Mr Major's strong personal rapport with Chancellor Helmut Kohl to help revise downwards the Commission's proposals. Whitehall also opposes signs of growing trends in the Commission towards interventionism.
    8. And for a daring improvisor with a disarmingly unpretentious rapport with his audience, a club setting suits him fine.
    9. Big voice, attractively warm; technique not equal yet to sharp rhythms, and rapport with the conductor decidedly weak.
    10. "He instantly had a great rapport with our caseworkers," she said. "It's pretty bizarre _ definitely." Ms. Hay said the child's sisters and brother may have been abused, although not physically.
    11. IRI's board said in a statement yesterday that after "an in-depth examination of events," it had decided to "cease its rapport" with Alitalia Chairman Umberto Nordio.
    12. He was sometimes indecisive and failed to strike a rapport with either Tory backbenchers or industrialists. As a Commons performer he lacks panache.
    13. However, the GM-10's ultimate test won't be the rapport generated among GM white-collar workers but the demand generated in the marketplace.
    14. But he has little rapport with Melinda Mullins, a disappointment as Lady Macbeth.
    15. "Call it what you will _ customer obsession, putting the reader first, serving the constituents _ we must do it better," he said. "I firmly believe that if we build a strong rapport with our communities, we will prosper.
    16. He extolled the rapport he and Bush developed in their ties-off dialogue at Camp David, the president's rustic mountaintop retreat in Maryland.
    17. I enjoy acting on stage better because there are less people with walkie-talkie's in your face." Sweeney felt an immediate rapport with Sayles ("Brother From Another Planet," "Matewan"), and enjoyed working with him on the set.
    18. "If you don't have that rapport you wouldn't accomplish anything.
    19. Suddenly, there are large numbers of black faces where Afrikaans maidens previously held sway; and the new integrated cabin crews demonstrate an obvious rapport, and an oblivion to racial distinction, which is a model for the nation.
    20. "He's the one she grew up with," Hutchinson said. "She's had other keepers, but never developed the kind of rapport she had with him.
    21. "We'll be lean and mean with a continuation of the real good rapport we have with employees," he said. Fifteen percent of America West stock is held by employees.
    22. "You want this woman to like you," one doctor says, because establishing emotional rapport will ensure that she'll return.
    23. But support from Mr Pehr Gyllenhammar, the head of Volvo, helped secure Mr Schweitzer's appointment as chairman of the French car group. The two chairmen say there is a close rapport between them.
    24. But it has always been difficult for Philadelphia's mayors to achieve rapport with the easily distracted city council.
    25. The fast-talking Kuron, with his jeans and cigarette-and-whisky-tainted voice, relishes his rapport with the rather prim prime minister in twinsets and pearls.
    26. If it does, he will be a strong challenger to the front runner, Mr Lus Inacio Lula da Silva of the left-wing Workers Party (PT), usually known as Lula. Mr Cardoso's problem is that he has found it difficult to develop a rapport with poor voters.
    27. Their desks were next to each other in Boston, and they immediately struck up a rapport.
    28. He and Shultz have developed what both describe as a good rapport in their frequent meetings.
    29. Many families said she had a terrific rapport with children, but Wasserman twice made restitution to employer families after his daughter was suspected of stealing food or clothes, police say.
    30. President Bush and Soviet President Mikhail S. Gorbachev boasted Sunday of their summit rapport and agreed they should get together more often.
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