Dictionary Workbench Ondict

echelon

Dictionary entry view. Switch to definition mode above when you know the meaning but not the word.

echelon

Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English 5++朗文当代英语 5++LDOCE 5++朗文 5++
Related topics: Organizations, Military
ech·e·lon /ˈeʃəlɒn $ -lɑːn/ noun [countable]  1 (also echelons [plural])SSOPOSITION/RANK a rank or level of authority in an organization, business etc, or the people at that level 〔组织、企业等的〕梯队;阶层upper/higher/lower echelons the upper echelons of government 政府高层 Their clients are drawn from the highest echelons of society. 他们的客户是从社会最高层吸引来的。2. technicalPM a line of ships, soldiers, planes etc arranged in a pattern that looks like a series of steps 〔船只、士兵和飞机等的〕梯形编队
Examples from the Corpus
echelonThis length could be reduced slightly if they were stabled en echelon.The incoming immune adults then graze the lower more fibrous echelons of the herbage which contain the majority of the L3.Even the highest echelons of management could not explain the decision.When you are in the lower echelons of any service, you are left guessing a lot of the time.Police as suspects For some suspects in the second echelon, the search is over.Brilliant riddles floated up and down the echelons, to be pondered, solved, ignored.The top echelons of the civil service have generally abjured responsibility for policy decisions.The nobility of Savoy was also closely linked to the upper echelons of the clergy.Not the upper upper echelons, but Digby level echelons.upper/higher/lower echelonsThat disaffection increasingly is extending from the frontline level into higher echelons.Not until ten o'clock for the upper echelons.When you are in the lower echelons of any service, you are left guessing a lot of the time.There were also wide-ranging personnel changes in the upper echelons of the armed forces and the police.Women almost all somewhere in the lower echelons. what was the new army going to look like?However, for those in the higher echelons of government it was a period of seemingly near apocalypse.The nobility of Savoy was also closely linked to the upper echelons of the clergy.This insoluble predicament was the source of the decay, corruption and mounting tension evident within the upper echelons of the regime.
From Longman Business Dictionaryechelonech‧e‧lon /ˈeʃəlɒn-lɑːn/ noun [countable] a rank or level of responsibility within an organization, group of businesses etc, or a person at that levelthose in the highest echelons of managementThe banking system normally helps allocate money to the lower echelon but at the moment there is a credit squeeze.Origin echelon (1700-1800) French
ech·e·lon nounChineseSyllable
of a Business Corpus rank level or an in organization, authority business


echelon
echelon /ˈeʃəlɒn $ -lɑːn/ noun [countable]
 Date: 1700-1800
 Language: French
1. (also echelons [plural]) a rank or level of authority in an organization, business etc, or the people at that level
    upper/higher/lower echelons
    the upper echelons of government
    Their clients are drawn from the highest echelons of society.
2. technical a line of ships, soldiers, planes etc arranged in a pattern that looks like a series of steps


ech·elonBrE /ˈeʃəlɒn/ 🔊NAmE /ˈeʃəlɑːn/ 🔊 noun [usually plural] a rank or position of authority in an organization or a society 职权的等级;阶层the lower/upper/top/higher echelons of the Civil Service公务员的低层/上层/最高层/高层an arrangement of soldiers, planes, etc. in which each one is behind and to the side of the one in front (士兵、飞机等的)梯形编队,梯队