1.(对...)宣战
1.to make a formal public announcement that the country represented is now at war with another country and will begin military action against it
2.to begin a fierce campaign to get rid of or defeat something, or start fighting it in earnest
1.Duo shook his head sadly, wishing he was just a spectator, and not the Angel of Death, coming to declare war on Earth.
迪奥难过的摇了摇头,衷心的希望自己只是个旁观者,而不是来到地球上宣布战争的死亡天使。
2.It suited Hitler's book at the moment not to declare war on the United States -that was all .
希特勒当时不对美国宣战只是为了适应他自已的计划。
3.By contrast, as the day unfolded, it looked awfully easy to declare war on us.
相比之下,随着时间的推移,对我们发动进攻看起来非常容易。
4.the courage to declare war on the dark people, hearts must be filled with light.
敢于向黑暗宣战的人,心里必须充满光明。
5.A private military contractor based in Virginia decides that it would be commercially wise to declare war on the federal government.
弗吉尼亚的个体军火承包商觉得向联邦政府宣战从生意角度讲非常明智。
6.Sometimes it seems that the country's entire political class is just looking for the next excuse to declare war on the other side.
有时候,美国的整个政治阶层看上去不过是在为向对方宣战不断寻找下一个借口。
7.The authority to declare war is given to Congress, not the president, but that authority has been steadily usurped ever since World War II.
宣战的权力是属于议会而非属于总统的,然而,这个权力从二战时起已逐步被篡夺。
8.Growing speculation that the President is about to declare war.
越来越多的人猜测总统就要宣战,因而美元急剧贬值。
9.If German submarines sank American ships, Wilson would have no choice but to declare war.
如果德国潜艇击沉美国船只,威尔逊将别无选择,只能宣战。
10.President Woodrow Wilson asked Congress to declare war against Germany, saying, "The world must be made safe for democracy. "
年,伍德罗·威尔逊总统要求国会对德宣战,称要“建立一个安全的民主世界”。