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Give teeth to Meaning in English

expression

ˈɡɪv/ /ˈtiθ/ /ˈtu/, /tə/, /tɪ
GIV TEETH TOO, tuh, tih
ɡˈɪv/ /tˈiːθ/ /tˈuː
giv TEETH TOO

释义

To make something (like a law, rule, or organization) stronger or able to be enforced, so it actually has real power or effect.

用法与细微差别

This is a formal, mainly written expression. Often used for laws, policies, regulations, or organizations, especially when they gain authority or means of enforcement. Do not use in everyday, literal contexts (not about real teeth). Common collocations: 'give teeth to the new law', 'give real teeth to'. Contrast with 'lip service' (only talk, no power).

例句

The new regulations finally give teeth to what was once just a suggestion.

natural

The government wants to give teeth to the new environmental law.

basic

Adding penalties would give teeth to the company policies.

basic

The treaty only works if it is given teeth.

basic

Activists are pushing to give teeth to the anti-corruption agency.

natural

Unless you give teeth to the policy, people might ignore it.

natural