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: appease speek appease


[глагол]
успокаивать; умиротворять; утолять; утолить; облегчать; ублажать; потакать


Тезаурус:

  1. The conduct of the War required fiscal policies sufficiently egalitarian to appease the conscience of even the most austere socialist.
  2. THE DISPOSSESSED Rocky road to Rio June's Earth Summit may appease the rich nations, but what will it do for the world's poor, asks Jeremy Seabrook
  3. A base rate of 15 per cent is perilously close to monetary overkill, let alone the still higher rates which might be needed to appease the rapacious gods of the foreign exchange markets.
  4. Pacare , originally meaning "to appease", took on the interpretation "to pay (a debt)".
  5. We will annually spend an unnecessary 10 million to 20 million on a misdirected reorganisation of the Nature Conservancy Council, which was ruthlessly promoted against all informed advice, largely to appease Scottish landowners already hell-bent on destroying other sorts of peatlands.
  6. But there was still a murderous and suicidal Rogozhin inside him to appease, presiding over his disintegration.
  7. Baldwin's and Chamberlain's attempts to appease Hitler were in this respect thoroughly British.
  8. Twelve years later, Brereton again went to the Dogmore, to appease "great tumults of the Tennants ther gathered together".
  9. Superficially, Mr Akhtar's compromise has appeal in a liberal/secular society because it is designed to protect human sensitivities which we all recognise, rather than to appease a deity in whom relatively few believe.
  10. Many homes were equipped with an altar called a thyterion on which incense was burnt to appease the gods.
  11. When an inferior cat is approached by a dominant enemy, as an attempt to appease the more powerful one with its submissive, non-hostile signal.
  12. Two of his daughters lived "in sin" without any comment from their father, but as soon as Louis the Pious inherited the crown, he banished these sisters to appease the Church and his own sensitive conscience.
  13. Peter Robinson, the Democratic Unionist Party's deputy leader, described the arrests as a publicity stunt designed to appease the UDR's critics.

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