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Перевод: dilettante speek dilettante


[прилагательное]
дилетантский; любительский;
[существительное]
дилетант ; любитель


Тезаурус:

  1. Unlike Stalin and Khruschev, Elena did not use her dilettante approach to science to promote a bogus figure like the Soviet agronomist Trofim Lysenko - though it must be admitted that Nicolae Ceauescu's interventions in agricultural practice often recalled the half-baked interference of Lysenko's patron, Khruschev.
  2. a dilettante artist, a protg of John Jarndyce's who affects a childlike gaiety and simplicity but is really a shameless sponger; his apparent innocence of worldly concerns is sedulously fostered to relieve him of any common responsibilities.
  3. The drug is still occasionally used experimentally by scientists, psychiatrists, and philosophers, as well as by dilettante drug takers.
  4. As a result, it is hardly surprising that everything from Patches to the Daily Telegraph employs at least one rock correspondent, from a teenage school-leaver in doorstep Nikes and a back-to-front baseball cap to some affable dilettante with a plum in his mouth and old school tie.
  5. Among these men where learning and speculation have become a leisured pursuit - where the amateur-cum-Renaissance man is king and the dilettante is the hero - a new world-view is being forged.
  6. And as a result of the dilettante attitude you describe men have died: three of my colleagues, two at virtually the same place in Act III of Tristan .
  7. He decided that for him to sit back and imagine, to follow a Bensonian way and be a dilettante among refined ideas, was an actual temptation.
  8. Among the points it made was that the Revival was "simply the fruit of dilettante and antiquarian study", and "if thirteenth century architecture was so perfectly adapted to the circumstances of the day", it cannot therefore be so for the nineteenth.
  9. This was not true - he was very much a dilettante in these things - but it shocked people into making the changes we needed.
  10. Just another bloody journalist, a dilettante with a ragbag mind, who thought that because he had a smattering of scientific language, which he produced with a glib assurance that made George want to choke him, he was qualified to question him , a serious scientist with an intellectual grasp that Gerrard could never understand, let alone achieve.
  11. I know that I will always be a dilettante by comparison.
  12. There is now no room for the amateur or the dilettante in the business.
  13. This famous author of 3,000 "incomparable" (Byron) letters, among other largely dilettante activities, showed by a letter written to Sir Horace Mann on 8 June 1791 that he knew of the 1788 Kentish Town Act, which freed the Earl of Camden to build 1,400 houses in Kentish Town.

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