0 to plan secretly with other people to do something bad, illegal, or against someone's wishes -- 密謀;共謀;圖謀
As girls, the sisters used to conspire with each other against their brother. 還是小女孩的時候,姐妹倆常常在一起密謀對付她們的哥哥。
[ + to infinitive ] He felt that his colleagues were conspiring together to remove him from his job. 他覺得同事們在密謀把他從工作崗位上擠走。
This, in spite of the fact that they then also ran the risk of being accused of conspiring against the state.
Many of the representations which conspire in the semantics from which language is inextricable, in vision, in motor action, in emotion, are analogue representations.
Roughly speaking, chaotic fluid particle motion may result when structures in the flow conspire to strongly stretch, contract and fold a region of fluid.
Popular culture and scientific liberalism thus conspired to sketch out firm maps of the extent of human personality and the limited ambit of scientific representation.
And these old southerners also conspired as a group to forestall any challenge to the southern segregation system, their obsessive interest.
It has proven difficult to establish a single responsible factor and it is probably the case that a number of factors conspire.
In the case of objects their informative status largely conspires with the syntactic requirement that they be expressed overtly.
These processes conspire to produce output that is commensurate with what we will try to show is a parochially deviant system.