i ia ib ic id ie if ig ih ii ik il im in io ip iq ir is it iu iv iw ix

Перевод: inherently


[наречие]
по существу; от природы


Тезаурус:

  1. Labour's socialism was therefore inherently hostile to sexual radicalism.
  2. Even during the phase of rampant textual materialism, Ricardou and others were still able to claim that avant-garde writing was inherently political by its very existence.
  3. Unless therefore the right asserted is tautologous and meaningless - unless "adequate" means simply whatever is available in the given circumstances - its assertion is a threat not merely of arbitrary compulsion but of unlimited and inherently futile compulsion: it is a programme of nihilistic aggression.
  4. His suggestion is to see competing criteria as both compatible and congruent and to accept that "organizational effectiveness is inherently paradoxical.
  5. The former concept had a crucial historical advantage at the birth of mechanics; Western thinkers approaching things as materials which stay put until the craftsman or builder reaches for them, would not have started trying to measure how the inert is moved by external forces if they had been thinking in terms of inherently active ch'i .
  6. Plato was surely mistaken to think the soul inherently immortal by nature rather than in dependence on God's will, and to suppose it capable of reincarnation.
  7. It was extremely cheap, saving an awful lot of dynamite; and extremely safe, both inherently and because the fuel and oxidant were only mixed on site just before use.
  8. The style of an artefact does not inherently tell us its age - independent dating techniques are required.
  9. The eminent Kleinian psychoanalyst, Hanna Segal, has recently declared the adult homosexual structure to be inherently pathological, disturbed, and perverse, and this because of an inbuilt, narcissistic desire for the same: "homosexuality is of necessity a narcissistic condition, as the name itself betrays.
  10. However, jewellery may be stolen, cattle may die and grain deteriorates in quality with the passage of time, thus wealth in these forms is inherently risky and to a certain extent illiquid, i.e. not usually suitable for instant transfer or use.
  11. He shows, without condescension, that Sylvia is inherently decent for all that her culture is founded on women's magazines and television serials.
  12. You are saying that the answer is to do that which is inherently contradictory, to make the silent majority speak, to make the average the exception and so on.
  13. One is that no actual endangerment is required: the explosion need only have been inherently likely to endanger life, and the offence is committed whether or not anyone's life was put in danger.

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