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Перевод: morbid speek morbid


[прилагательное]
болезненный; нездоровый вид; психически нездоровый; отвратительный; болезненно впечатлительный; ужасный; патологический


Тезаурус:

  1. (Someone suggested that "old Cross" even lectured on morbid anatomy from these carcasses.)
  2. He also suffered from a morbid fear of castration which lingered with him throughout his life; possessed of plenty, as he saw it, he realized how much he had to lose.
  3. Although she was a somewhat morbid woman she also had a vivid imagination and was able to combine an exciting story with a good dose of sentimentality, much as Ian Maclaren would do later.
  4. One can go on and on listing East Germany's morbid shortcomings.
  5. Or Psychic TV's "Godstar", their knowingly morbid celebration of the Stones in their most colourful, outlawed years of lurid decay, the angel Brian Jones about to snuff out.
  6. Contrary to the process in Eco's novel, Pazzi effects a caesura between past and present in a way that is disturbing - the fascination of his novel is also a morbid one.
  7. The songs on Lovesexy are fullbodied, throbbing, for sure, but the unnatural excitation of tissue, the swelling and the morbid flush that characterize Prince's peaks, are nowhere to be seen.
  8. Where designer pop-soul seeks to bolster narcissism ("learning to love yourself/is the greatest love of all," as Whitney Houston puts it) and amplify one's sense of human capability to manage life, hardcore finds perverse pleasure in damaging narcissism, destabilizing one's sense of human mastery, by a morbid preoccupation with psychic breakdown, arbitrary violence, random calamity, irrational impulses, the Whole gamut of "unemployable negativity" (Bataille).
  9. Some people react so strongly against the morbid view of doubt that they treat doubt casually, even celebrate it.
  10. Unforgivable things were said, and then repeated with morbid satisfaction by the aggrieved party in the manner of beggars displaying their sores.
  11. Esme Green explained: "This is where the bones of St Winifred were brought from Holywell, which is detailed in the first book, A Morbid Taste for Bones.
  12. It must be allowed, however, that there were attitudes that can legitimately he designated as morbid; for example, there was a cult of consumptive girls.
  13. The site of the garden has taken on special significance since A Morbid Taste for Bones, by Ellis Peters, was published in 1977.

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