adjective
COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES
diplomatic bag
diplomatic corps
diplomatic immunity
diplomatic posting
▪ a diplomatic posting
diplomatic pressure (=pressure from other countries' governments)
▪ The announcement of a ceasefire came after intense diplomatic pressure from the US.
diplomatic protocol
▪ a breach of diplomatic protocol
diplomatic relations (also international/foreign relations) (= official relations between two countries)
▪ By then, Canada and Britain had established diplomatic relations with North Korea.
▪ This visit was the President’s most important breakthrough in international relations.
Diplomatic Service
diplomatic ties
▪ the establishment of diplomatic ties between the two countries
diplomatic triumph
▪ a tremendous diplomatic triumph for France
international/diplomatic/political isolation
▪ the country’s continuing political isolation
rescue/diplomatic/fact-finding etc mission
▪ a group of US congressmen on a fact-finding mission to Northern Ireland
restore (diplomatic) relations with sb
▪ Vietnam restored diplomatic relations with South Korea on December 22.
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ ADVERB
more
▪ I was pleased that he was more diplomatic afterwards instead of being as over the top as ever.
▪ A more diplomatic approach can pay off.
■ NOUN
activity
▪ Prior to Gorbachev's visit there had been intense diplomatic activity between the two countries.
▪ The Tokyo meeting was preceded by a great deal of diplomatic activity during May.
▪ Whether diplomatic activity should be shielded from the public gaze is a matter for debate.
▪ The potential for the fighting to spill over into a wider regional conflict has triggered a flurry of diplomatic activity.
▪ Yesterday Arab leaders were engaged in a flurry of diplomatic activity to coordinate their positions in advance of Mr Christopher's visit.
▪ The Paris meeting had been anticipated by heightened diplomatic activity.
▪ In early 1991 there was an unprecedented degree of diplomatic activity between the two countries.
bag
▪ Without ciphers and diplomatic bags, espionage and counter-espionage actions were likely to be circumscribed.
▪ The Foreign Office had a contract with the prison to launder diplomatic bags.
▪ It arrived via the diplomatic bag on Saturday morning.
channel
▪ The diplomatic channel was generally used, and few bilateral treaties dealt with the subject.
contact
▪ Hurd flew to the Gulf on Aug. 31 to pursue diplomatic contacts.
▪ Moreover, this growth of diplomatic contacts was a two-way process.
▪ The best hope that Kampuchea can be spared more agony is the gathering weight of diplomatic contact.
corps
▪ For all of its own bureaucratic strictures, the diplomatic corps had the sympathetic ears that Liang was looking for.
▪ In Chongqing, Joe sought out contacts who could introduce him to the upper levels of the government and diplomatic corps.
effort
▪ Devoting maximum diplomatic effort to dilution and delay.
▪ But there were no outward signs that diplomatic efforts would soon defuse the fighting.
▪ Considerable diplomatic efforts were by now under way to end the fighting, though only one intervention now bore fruit.
▪ Every diplomatic effort was made to get him and his army to retire back over the frontier, but without success.
▪ Instead, officials intend to try turning up the pressure through sanctions and continued diplomatic efforts.
▪ Against that background, diplomatic efforts to find a solution to the impasse intensified.
▪ The coming months will see considerable diplomatic efforts channelled in that direction.
immunity
▪ Socially, we benefited from a sort of diplomatic immunity.
▪ A principle as old as ancient tribes and almost as remotely understood, diplomatic immunity is taking a beating this week.
▪ Embassy officials have said that Makharadze, an economics minister, had diplomatic immunity.
▪ It was an outrageous action, the worst violation of the basic principle of diplomatic immunity in modern history.
▪ State Department officials said Monday that no country has agreed to waive diplomatic immunity in such a serious case.
▪ Both are protected by diplomatic immunity.
incident
▪ Then, in Hong Kong, Chris Patten and family were reunited with their beloved terrier whose disappearance caused a diplomatic incident.
▪ The looming enforced removal of Mr Ozberk, 30, has the makings of a diplomatic incident.
initiative
▪ By October 1989, therefore, the time was right for a concerted diplomatic initiative against drift-net fishing.
▪ Prospects for diplomatic initiatives - US-Soviet statement Amid renewed calls for an immediate ceasefire there were reports of continued diplomatic initiatives.
isolation
▪ Economic sanctions, the cultural and sporting boycotts, and diplomatic isolation must be maintained and intensified.
▪ Kim Il Sung also found the dialogue with the South to be beneficial, especially in breaking out of his diplomatic isolation.
language
▪ The letter's painstakingly constructed diplomatic language continued to cause translation problems, even after both sides had agreed it.
▪ This is diplomatic language for joint hegemony and a proposed sellout of the Peloponnesian League.
links
▪ Nevertheless the political and diplomatic links which bound her to the rest of the continent were slowly multiplying and becoming stronger.
mission
▪ Only VIPs and foreign diplomatic missions are given permission to utilise such dishes.
▪ Cobham might adorn a diplomatic mission but would surely mismanage a key political post such as that of Canterbury's archbishopric.
▪ They are considered attaches to the diplomatic mission there and are not armed.
▪ The success of a diplomatic mission depends as much as anything on the quality of the information.
▪ A token number of official diplomatic missions is desirable but not essential.
▪ Crucial to the success of diplomatic missions were first the quality of the ambassadors and secondly the political intelligence.
▪ It has nine permanent diplomatic missions abroad.
post
▪ If the profession had declined into almost insignificance it is doubtful whether there would have been such a burgeoning of diplomatic posts.
▪ It was often difficult to persuade able men to accept diplomatic posts in distant capitals.
pressure
▪ Mahdi denies that his movement wants weapons or financing from Washington, saying moral support and diplomatic pressure are enough.
protest
▪ New Zealand regularly sent diplomatic protests at the start of each series of tests.
recognition
▪ He had hoped for concessions in return, including diplomatic recognition.
representative
▪ The use of soldiers as diplomatic representatives was far from unknown before the nineteenth century.
▪ Madame Bihi was a longstanding diplomatic representative who had been appointed by the government of President Barre.
▪ Franklin Roosevelt had maintained a diplomatic representative in Vichy from the outset.
service
▪ Gradually it became more institutionalised as something resembling organised diplomatic services emerged.
▪ He retired in 1809 after twenty-six years in the diplomatic service.
▪ They were even more alarmed by hostility to the papal diplomatic service.
▪ There is a shortage of suitable recruits in the diplomatic service, which offers varied experience abroad and a good career structure.
▪ Two years later a new commercial diplomatic service was created.
▪ Usually diplomatic services and foreign offices in this respect merely reflected the societies they served.
▪ The mechanism could still be operated satisfactorily by diplomatic services which were small and content to remain so.
▪ The establishment of permanent ambassadors marked the beginnings of a diplomatic service.
skill
▪ Britain should therefore not hesitate to use whatever powers and diplomatic skills she possesses to ensure that it does not come about.
▪ Intense prayer, along with astute technical and diplomatic skill, was dedicated to this problem.
▪ A top flight soldier with diplomatic skills would fit the bill.
solution
▪ There were those who argued that such action would alienate world opinion and sabotage the chances of a diplomatic solution.
▪ Leclerc preferred a diplomatic solution to a larger conflict.
▪ A cooler customer, it is suggested, would somehow have sought and found a diplomatic solution.
source
▪ According to diplomatic sources up to 300 people were killed in the violence.
▪ Journalists and diplomatic sources, however, cast doubt on the government's version.
▪ As recently as September Western diplomatic sources maintained that civil flights would infringe the zones.
▪ The Independent of Feb. 27 cited diplomatic sources as stating that 44 elected representatives had been imprisoned since the previous May.
▪ According to diplomatic sources, Baker warned that failure to address the charges could derail the peace process.
▪ According to diplomatic sources, Mbonimpa had been opposed to the moves by President Buyoya to include Hutus in the government.
status
▪ Nevertheless the steep decline which her diplomatic status had suffered since the Crimean War was arrested.
▪ Baya was questioned that day and, because of his diplomatic status, released.
▪ Both groups would have diplomatic status.
tie
▪ It was hoped to open the border and renew diplomatic ties by the end of 1991.
▪ Fifthly, non-diplomatic personnel are increasingly either having diplomatic influence or being involved in activity affecting diplomatic ties.
traffic
▪ So the Council had control both of outgoing and of incoming diplomatic traffic.
▪ Together, on a daily odd-even basis, they were responsible for diplomatic traffic.
PHRASES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
charm/diplomatic offensive
▪ But then Sunderland came up with a new offer and Liverpool launched a fresh diplomatic offensive.
the Diplomatic Service
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪ A good secretary needs to be efficient, and above all diplomatic.
▪ He joined the diplomatic service and was posted to Ankara.
▪ Jen tried to be diplomatic as she explained the problem.
▪ Most members of the European diplomatic community have already left the country as war now seems inevitable.
▪ Robert's next diplomatic assignment was at the Paris embassy.
▪ Robson was trying to be as diplomatic as possible - he didn't want to risk losing a promotion.
▪ The governments of Britain and Syria are anxious to re-establish diplomatic relations.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ In Chongqing, Joe sought out contacts who could introduce him to the upper levels of the government and diplomatic corps.
▪ Moreover, this growth of diplomatic contacts was a two-way process.
▪ The car was unmarked, there were no military or diplomatic plates, no official driver, no bodyguard.
▪ The guarding of military and diplomatic secrets at the expense of informed representative government provides no real security for our Republic.
▪ The mechanism could still be operated satisfactorily by diplomatic services which were small and content to remain so.