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Перевод: allege
[глагол] утверждать; ссылаться; приписывать
Тезаурус:
- This caution is reinforced by a second reason, which in practical terms may be of paramount importance, the fear of being the object of a legal action at the suit of parents, guardians, or relatives, who might allege that the patient was neglected, and would urge that the patient's refusal should not have been relied upon.
- Claimants allege that the two firms failed to warn doctors about the addiction patients say resulted from prolonged use of Ativan and Valium, prescribed to treat anxiety.
- Mr Symington was on the board of a savings and loan, as Mr Goddard's advertisements allege, but he resigned in 1984 when the thrift was still in good shape.
- Local Tories plan to lobby Colin Moynihan, the Minister for Sport, at this week's Conservative Party conference to allege that the course in being mismanaged by the local Labour council.
- It is possible that in the past any Zuwayi would have felt free to continue personally the feud with Zliten if he could allege that the peace was unsatisfactory or incomplete.
- This style, critics allege, is accentuated by Britain's two-party system and unfair (because disproportional) first past the post electoral system, which produces virtually full power for the government and virtual impotence for the opposition.
- He went on to allege that the Liberal Democrats had received 15 times as much in donations, but refrained from naming names.
- With figures like these the WEA, here as elsewhere, was a long way from being the body of "middle-class" students pursuing "soft options" which its critics liked to allege.
- In terms of the total percentage who alleged bias on television, those who actually watched BBC or ITV news were slightly more inclined to allege bias (Table 6.1).
- However, those who had expressed a more general interest in politics during the parliamentary mid-term were more likely to allege bias on television and in their papers during the campaign.
- Researchers allege figures "politically manipulated"
- This is not the fallacy (although some allege it to be so) of Nigel Lawson's exchange rate policy, nor the fallacy (which others allege) of the money supply policy which Mrs Thatcher would prefer, but the fallacy of supposing government can be conducted successfully on the basis of ambiguous vacillation.
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