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Перевод: disdain speek disdain


[существительное]
презрение; пренебрежение; надменность ;
[глагол]
презирать; пренебрегать; гнушаться; смотреть свысока; считать ниже своего достоинства


Тезаурус:

  1. Sarah gave her mother a look of absolute disdain.
  2. At Oxford, Mr Gould joined the Labour Party partly in response to what he saw as an attempt by the City to frustrate the 1964 election results and he has retained a disdain for the get-rich-quick philosophy of the City ever since.
  3. Oasa and Jennings (1982) go further and show the disdain and hostility that the International Center for the Improvement of Maize and Wheat (CIMMYT), and the International Rice Research Institute (IRRI) showed for the comments and criticisms of social scientists about the social implications of the technology that these institutions were developing.
  4. Gedge has a rather cynical disdain for his early involvement with music but he nevertheless recognises its lasting influence.
  5. On what so lately I disdain'd to look on?
  6. In this poem we see their shared Jewishness, and the "irreverence" (as some would see it) they each had for the Tradition - at least for that view of it which some espoused; we also see a shared disdain for rabbinic (and priestly) logic, to them both a form of mental death.
  7. In contrast, the portrait of Ahmed has none of the disdain which could be observed in the writer's article about Michael X. Ahmed's bluffs are called, but they are understood, and carefully related to his earlier life on the island.
  8. He has a disdain of showiness.
  9. Of the eastern deputies who pipe up in parliament, some (like the eloquent former communist Gregor Gysi) are heard out with wrath, most only with amused disdain.
  10. Her father and mother were sitting tensely on the sofa, Omi at the table, upright, disdain on her fine features, Bodo, huge against the wall, and all of them staring at the stubby, shabby, ash-stained figure of Marx, blinking through his red eyes at the document and reading aloud in an artificially solemn voice, practised in legal jargon and with which he, no doubt, had read out a hundred, a thousand, such documents.
  11. The last time we met he was singing the number at a Friars' Club gala in New York and, for all the lofty intellectual disdain one feels obliged to muster at tuxedo circuit events, it was undeniably impressive to see him afterwards, the only British subject in the room, surrounded by Lauren Bacall, Lena Horne and Gwen Verdon.
  12. He also throws away too many key phrases: "This Triton of the minnows" is a magnificent epithet for Sicinius but it here gets lost and although in the great banishment-speech Mr Dance's body-language is good (as he hurls his coat to the ground in fine disdain) it is significant that the directors resort to an echo-chamber effect on "There is a world elsewhere."
  13. Such disdain for something that has become almost universal in the first-class game clearly helps in his psychological battle with the bowlers; disdain is, in fact, an important part of his armoury, combining with his might and skill to cement his authority.

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