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Перевод: autocracy speek autocracy


[существительное]
самодержавие; автократия


Тезаурус:

  1. The affair was venerated by later revolutionaries as the opening round in their battle against the autocracy.
  2. For the autocracy the aim was not to spread general enlightenment but to improve the quality of the civil and military leadership, to train men capable of developing administrative, military, and technological skills.
  3. Whatever the institutional form of the state machine, whether the limited democracy of Germany under the Kaiser or the autocracy of Czarist Russia, the proletariat's first task was to smash the state apparatus in a revolutionary push for power.
  4. Her voice had that familiar note that was halfway between wheedling and autocracy and Sally's heart sank.
  5. They prevented the development of royal autocracy, even absolutism.
  6. Catherine reacted furiously to the first major attack on serfdom and autocracy, Journey from Petersburg to Moscow (1790) by A. D. Radishchev (1749-;1802).
  7. Extraordinary as those visits were - and as warmly welcomed as he found himself in the diverse Kesparates of Yzordderrex - the city state was an autocracy of the most extreme kind, its excesses dwarfing the repressions of the country he'd been born in.
  8. The autocracy counted for something; personal friendship between the Romanoff and Hohenzollern dynasties was important under Alexander II.
  9. as much a revolution of the non-Russian against Russification as it was a revolution of workers, peasants and radical intellectuals against autocracy.
  10. Autocracy appeared the very linchpin of everything that offended a small but intellectually dynamic intelligentsia which was breaking away from the traditional values of the nobility.
  11. Without proper interrogation and criticism, government leans away from democracy towards autocracy.
  12. Stead argues that only constant inquiry (for which I could substitute "inside ethnography") can prevent such an unacceptable trend, and it is some comfort to see a probationary policewoman, such as Cressida Dick (1985), pointing out the political compromises such autocracy can produce, but which few of the chief officers seem willing to admit or even acknowledge.
  13. Today, in the early 1990s there seems to be every possibility their taste for autocracy and power might persuade the police that secrecy should take on a new dimension, so that sedition could acquire new status as a deviance, while even the "espionage" of ethnography could well become actionable.

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