a aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax ay az

Перевод: abjure speek abjure


[глагол]
отрекаться; отказываться; отступаться


Тезаурус:

  1. I would abjure my art then and there, leave off cursing, leave off binding fast and loose with spells.
  2. "" I charge you, therefore, for the present abjure all fighting but that is forced upon you, when no man can blame if you do valiantly in your own defence.
  3. She cannot abjure, give up, control the force by which she is possessed.
  4. To pay for this, Galileo was made to kneel and admit to being vain and ambitious and to abjure the Copernican doctrine as being wrong.
  5. It is the prevailing view of the sovereignty of Parliament, above discussed, that if Parliament wished to cast off a part of the British Dominions and abjure jurisdiction over it, it could do so.
  6. The aim is to target and then monitor reform-minded governments - Ecuador might be the first - and create "islands of integrity": countries whose officials abjure bribery in the hope of shaming others into doing the same.
  7. However it was not Tolkien's way to deny orthodoxy: nor to abjure equally old and traditional belief in the allure of elves and their separation from evil.
  8. There are, moreover, many small farmers who prefer to follow a traditional "way of life" and abjure the profit maximization that often provides landscape change.
  9. Derrida himself, therefore, does not in any sense abjure history (or totality) but rather attempts to reinscribe it by writing histories that set up supplementary figures whose logic simultaneously invokes and works against historical totalities.
  10. "I Galileo Galilei, being in my seventieth year having before my eyes the Holy Gospel, which I touch with my hands, abjure, curse and detest the error and heresy of the movement of the Earth."
  11. While Poole was urging him to remain true above all to poetry, Coleridge still had no sense of a purely poetic, or even literary, vocation, and for the moment could offer only two vague plans for the future, "the first impracticable - the second not likely to succeed": he could "make a portly Quarto" by translating all the works of Schiller, then set up a school at 100 guineas a head, or he could "abjure Politics carnal literature" altogether and become a dissenting parson.
  12. A group of students, chanting and carrying placards, milled round in the road outside Mr Rowse's house, accosting his patients, pleading with them to go home, abjure the Devil and seek proper medical attention.
  13. Not much perhaps, but if you answer my questions I can arrange for a pardon to be sent down under the usual condition: that you abjure the realm.

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