glass cliff
基本解釋
- 玻璃懸崖(指女性在職場遇到發(fā)展瓶頸,到了一定職位就很難再上升)
英漢例句
- A glass cliff is a term coined by Prof Michelle Ryan and Prof Alex Haslam of Exeter University, United Kingdom, in 2004.
(玻璃懸崖)這個詞是由英國??怂固卮髮W(xué)的兩位教授米歇爾?萊恩和亞歷克斯·哈斯蘭姆在2004年創(chuàng)造的。 - our house for the first year or so was on the top of a cliff, so that in stormy weather the spray would sometimes soak my bed at night, for I had taken the glass out of the window, sash and all.
我們第一年住的房子坐落在海邊的峭壁上,而我又把窗戶的玻璃拆了下來,因此當(dāng)暴風(fēng)夜晚來襲時,水花時而會浸濕我的床。 - Essentially, she had hit a glass cliff: Dick Fuld had brought her in as CFO at a time when it was too late to save the firm.
FORBES: How Women Executives Who Leave Their Roles Affect the Next Generation of Women Leaders - On a cliff-top site with a massive curved glass wall—and built with slate floors, white walls and views which beautifully frame the surf, the fishermen's cottages and a distant lighthouse—the gallery is a powerful work of art in its own right.
ECONOMIST: Surfing the galleries
雙語例句
權(quán)威例句
英英字典
- a situation in which you are only given a high position in an organization when there are difficult conditions which make you likely to fail