vote with one's feet

短语

用脚投票

发音

AU /ˈvoʊt wɪð wʌnz ˈfiːt/

词形变化

voted with one's feet votes with one's feet 三单 votes with one's feet voting with one's feet voting with one's feet 现在分词 voted with one's feet 过去式 voted with one's feet 过去分词

释义与例句

v.
  1. 1.

    To express one's preferences through one's actions, by voluntarily participating in or withdrawing from an activity, group, or process; especially, by physical migration to leave a situation one does not like, or to move to a situation one regards as more beneficial.

    用脚投票

    习语

    But Khrushchev's economic plan for the East Germans means a new kind of dependence on their old Russian foes, and its fulfillment is a political question—on which East Germans, whatever their phony 99.9% elections say, still vote with their feet by fleeing West at the rate of 2,000 a week.

    TWA expects that its lounger will keep it flying high in transatlantic business, where it now leads all other airlines. Says Jesse Liebman, a TWA vice president: "Passengers vote with their feet."

词源

Probably based on the practice of pedibus in sententiam ire in the Roman Senate, but the phrase in its modern sense was popularized by Lenin, through whom it gained some currency in left-wing parlance in various languages. It became more widely known when Western journalists and politicians started using it, not without mockery, in reference to those individuals who fled Communist East Germany towards the West between 1945 and the erection of the Berlin Wall in 1961.

来源:wiktionary