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Перевод: commercialism speek commercialism


[существительное]
торгашеский дух; выражение, используемое в коммерческом языке


Тезаурус:

  1. Commercialism competed in the shape of these short zip-up versions.
  2. The use has led to further commercialism of the land and has been to the detriment of the rural character of the area, they say.
  3. What Roddick is at most pains to demonstrate is that honesty and commercialism can make compatible bedfellows.
  4. Alongside the late entry of capitalism into sport, which is bringing Britain closer to the commercialism of the Tour de France or the Superbowl - both of which significantly have begun to attract British audiences in sizeable numbers in the later 1980s - there lie two pressing issues: the decline of live audiences for sport and the rise of a hooligan subculture.
  5. The gambling issue underlined the central fact that professionalism and commercialism were not synonymous.
  6. DISILLUSION with pyjama flannels and commercialism has prompted the sudden resignation of cricket's unofficial "conscience".
  7. You have no open commercialism to compete with.
  8. Commercialism and Violence
  9. British sport began for the first time to embrace commercialism, although the process was cautious and gradual.
  10. He was sufficiently confused by the English way of repressing emotion to characterise kind Hearts and Coronets as characteristic of Ealing movies in being emotionally quite frozen," and so fastidiously determined to stay aloof from bland commercialism that he took no interest in the horror genre (even though his later use of the Frankenstein story in his 1982 film Britannia Hospital suggests how much of a contribution he might have made in this area).
  11. With the characteristic shrewdness of a former student of Chris Blackwell at Island, Ashley Newton finds a maxim to resolve the dilemma: "there is no necessary contradiction between commercialism and quality".
  12. Yet it has cast its spell since time immemorial - once the business of wizards and sorcerers, still the business of astrologers; once subject to aphrodisiacs, philtres and charms, now subject to immense commercialism.
  13. A half-understood commercialism seems to have permeated the library schools where readers are referred to as "customers".

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