mainstream

mainstream
{{Roman}}I.{{/Roman}}
noun
ADJECTIVE
cultural, political, etc.
VERB + MAINSTREAM
enter, hit, join, reach
cut sb/sth off from, exclude sb/sth from

These teachers have been cut off from the mainstream of educational activity.

PREPOSITION
in the mainstream, within the mainstream

He was in the mainstream of British contemporary music.

into the mainstream

This technology was designed for specialists but is now starting to move into the mainstream.

out of the mainstream, outside the mainstream

He drifted out of the mainstream of society.

PHRASES
part of the mainstream

This style of drama is not part of the cultural mainstream.

{{Roman}}II.{{/Roman}}
adj.
Mainstream is used with these nouns: ↑acceptance, ↑appeal, ↑audience, ↑cinema, ↑culture, ↑curriculum, ↑economics, ↑economist, ↑establishment, ↑feminism, ↑fiction, ↑film, ↑institution, ↑journalism, ↑journalist, ↑magazine, ↑media, ↑movie, ↑music, ↑Muslim, ↑newspaper, ↑politics, ↑pop, ↑press, ↑publication, ↑publisher, ↑religion, ↑rock, ↑school, ↑schooling, ↑society, ↑sociology, ↑sport

Collocations dictionary. 2013.

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Look at other dictionaries:

  • Mainstream EP — EP by Metric Released 1998 Recorded Unknown Genre Indie rock …   Wikipedia

  • mainstream — [mān′strēm΄] n. 1. the middle of a stream, where the current is strongest 2. the part of something considered to be the most active, productive, lively, busy, etc. [the mainstream of life] 3. a major or prevailing trend, as of thought, action,… …   English World dictionary

  • mainstream — main stream n. The prevailing opinion or practise; as, the doctor avoided using therapies outside the mainstream of modern medical practice. [PJC] …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • mainstream — ● mainstream nom masculin (mot anglais signifiant courant principal) Style des musiciens fidèles à la tradition du jazz des années 1930 et 1940, par opposition au jazz traditionnel et au jazz moderne. ● mainstream (synonymes) nom masculin (mot… …   Encyclopédie Universelle

  • mainstream — (n.) also main stream, main stream, principal current of a river, 1660s, from MAIN (Cf. main) (adj.) + STREAM (Cf. stream) (n.); hence, prevailing direction in opinion, popular taste, etc., a figurative use first attested in Carlyle (1831).… …   Etymology dictionary

  • mainstream — (izg. mèinstrim) m DEFINICIJA žarg. 1. najšire prihvaćen način mišljenja ili djelovanja 2. glazb. umjerena struja u jazzu i pop glazbi, dopadljiva širem krugu slušatelja [rock mainstream] ETIMOLOGIJA engl …   Hrvatski jezični portal

  • mainstream — ► NOUN ▪ normal or conventional ideas, attitudes, or activities. ► ADJECTIVE ▪ belonging to or characteristic of the mainstream …   English terms dictionary

  • mainstream — main stream v. t. (Education) TO place (a student) in regular school classes; used especially of mentally or physically handicapped children. [WordNet 1.5] …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • mainstream — [adj] prevailing accepted, average, common, conventional, current, dominant, established, general, normal, popular, predominant, primary, regular, standard, typical, widespread; concept 530 Ant. heterodox …   New thesaurus

  • Mainstream — For other uses, see Mainstream (disambiguation). Mainstream is, generally, the common current thought of the majority.[1] However, the mainstream is far from cohesive; rather the concept is often considered a cultural construct[citation needed].… …   Wikipedia

  • mainstream — ▪ I. mainstream main‧stream 1 [ˈmeɪnstriːm] noun 1. the mainstream of something the most usual way of doing something or thinking about something: • Depression era laws have kept banks out of the mainstream of financial change. 2. the mainstream… …   Financial and business terms

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