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Перевод: hidebound
[прилагательное] сильно исхудавший; ограниченный; недалекий; узкий; с узким кругозором; ограниченного действия
Тезаурус:
- Jones may be an idealist and will probably face a rude awakening when confronted with the realities of the economy and the hidebound attitudes of a bureaucracy that is watching his advent with some trepidation.
- Where the law or the Instruction Book was hidebound, a little imagination was a useful supplement.
- Football is often hidebound by facts.
- You'll find that not only is he no oil-painting (more like The Picture of Dorian Gray), but he's dull, predictable, lacklustre, hidebound, sexist and clumsy.
- Mr Livingstone attributed Labour's defeat to an economic policy hidebound by the need to defend the level of sterling inside the European exchange rate mechanism and an unwillingness to finance Labour's spending commitments from defence cuts rather than tax increases on middle income groups.
- Academic barriers to learning in the form of "gateway" qualifications have been progressively diminished until even the most hidebound institutions have evolved "open-access" programmes.
- They weren't so hidebound.
- There are a lot of missing links between design and product development because of manufacturing's hidebound attitude.
- Those who think of Pound as a great liberator from stiff and hidebound conventions will be disconcerted to find that Newbolt on the contrary treats him as an academic formalist.
- Radio produced a new kind of political commentator, far removed from the hidebound political columnist of the newspapers, epitomised by the American Fred Kaltenborn.
- The Bolshoi regime seems similarly hidebound, with Tsar Grigorovich running the world's largest ballet company like a children's home.
- When Peter assumed his full authority as Czar in 1689, Russia was a backward country, hidebound in restrictive traditions and conventions which had prevented social and industrial progress.
- It was argued in Chapter 2.5 and 2.6 that social attitudes towards various sources of harm are too hidebound by convention and ought to be re-examined.
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