1PROBLEMif a problem, difficulty etc confronts you, it appears and needs to be dealt with 〔问题、困难等〕使遇到,使面对
The problems confronting the new government were enormous.
新政府面临的难题是巨大的。
be confronted with something
Customers are confronted with a bewildering amount of choice.
顾客面前有琳琅满目的商品供选择。
2DEAL WITHto deal with something very difficult or unpleasant in a brave and determined way 勇敢地面对,正视
We try to help people confront their problems.
我们试图帮助人们正视他们的问题。
3THREATENto face someone in a threatening way, as though you are going to attack them 对峙,对抗
Troops were confronted by an angry mob.
与军队对峙的是一帮愤怒的群众。
4ACCUSEto accuse someone of doing something, especially by showing them the proof 对质,当面对证
confront somebody with/about something
I confronted him with my suspicions, and he admitted everything.
我当面向他提出我的怀疑,他什么都承认了。
I haven’t confronted her about it yet.
这件事我还没有和她当面对质过。
Examples from the Corpus
confront• At the same time, seriousthreats to the stability of the infantdemocracy also had to be confronted.• He would have liked to be able to confront and examine his own previousself.• They were confronted by about five men, one of whom had a gun.• Their lives were now confronted by earthshaking change, by the arrival of the modern world.• The FBI confronted Schmidt with the evidence of his part in the murderplot.• Move his two hundred in behind those fleeing ones, to confront the enemy?• The play is about a woman who confronts the man who tortured her in prison.• He spent time with customers, confronted the Power SupplyDivision and centralstaffs, and acted swiftly on all decisions.• We try to help people confront their problems.• Overall, there are several majorissuesconfronting us on the media front right now.• At our bakery, when we set up the loaves for baking the next day a similardilemmaconfronts us.
be confronted with something• Then we were confronted with a cornice.• Otherwise they may be confronted with a partially built, inoperableextension and serious deterioration in the existing service.• The pestcontrollers however, were confronted with an even bigger menace, in the form of a sealy dinosaur.• What rouses its wrath is the belief that Waco revealed the ruthlessness ofthe federal government when liberals are confronted with armed opponents.• I was confronted with great adventurestuff, plus the adventure special.• The emperoris confronted with the case of a modallegacy, the modus being restitution of some property to another individual.• Once again the managerswere confronted with the need to manageparadox.• Then, on opening them again, he would be confronted with the same problem: which of us is which?
confront ... problems• And other students were moving directly into the regular curriculum-as Otheguy and others wished-who had not had to confront their reading problems.• Some efforts are now being made to confront these problems.• They are confronted by big problems.• Healthministers must be honest and responsible enough to confront problems and chip in with extrafunds where ministers.• The one-habit-at-a-time modeSure, you confront several writing problems each time you rewrite a new document.• Here again, we confront the two problems of social-historical change and of the need to make value judgments.• But Jones may be confronted by more problems than he anticipates when he seeks funds for his ideas.
Originconfront
(1500-1600)Frenchconfronter“to have a border with, confront”, from Medieval Latin, from Latincom- ( → COM-) + frons ( → FRONT1)