0 to present something as being the opposite of another thing; to be the opposite of another thing -- 使对立;使对照;使均衡
It is dangerous to counterpose academic achievement and broader activities.
To this he counterposed the dictatorship of the proletariat, implemented by the communist party founded in 1847, based on the principles and program enunciated in the manifesto.
The experience of the heart, counterposed to the argumentation of the head, found expression in the language of love, of romance.
And this perhaps points to a prime characteristic of the imaginative strategies adopted by these writers in their responses to the new suburbia, counterposing the mundane with the otherworldly.
In this article, we counterpose the norms concerning who parents should turn to for help that government policies aim to inculcate with those held by parents themselves.
In its more extreme versions it carried racial implications by counterposing civilization (positive) with barbarism (negative).
Against the subversive function of memory, one must counterpose its consolation.
What is counterposed to the right against paternalistic interference is always the good of the individual whose right we are considering infringing.