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Перевод: notoriety speek notoriety


[существительное]
дурная слава; человек, пользующийся дурной славой; известность ; знаменитость


Тезаурус:

  1. Polanski, on the other hand, was, in Jack Nicholson's view, the recipient of Western justice: "His situation is a very interesting case of what notoriety can do to you.
  2. And it gained some notoriety for obduracy on female sufferance while the rest of the developed world was gradually seeing sense.
  3. But it seems that their notoriety was such that no waste disposer would take them, albeit Europe disposes of some 20000 tonnes of lethal chemicals a year, most not nearly so well wrapped.
  4. In the team's acclimatisation tour of Latin America, he kicked his way into the public's imagination and sowed the seeds of notoriety which eventually led to his life ban.
  5. In the last year of a brief life at the heart of a kind of doting celebrity that knew the value of success, he fell into notoriety of the sort that is just as American as his life.
  6. He began to etch into local notoriety via a series of small ads in the music press seeking to swap info with fellow New York Dolls fans.
  7. The reason for their notoriety is that they are complicated by a number of factors others than real changes in the levels of crime.
  8. More or less equal to Spurgeon in fame, and surpassing him in notoriety (for Spurgeon avoided party politics and was in many ways sui generis ) was the Congregationalist, Joseph Parker.
  9. One reason for visiting Ingolstadt is its several claims to religious fame, or notoriety.
  10. He was told that soon after the official ceasefire in Europe in 1945, a Nazi of some notoriety was escaping through the pass and it was decided to try to annihilate him, the only means available being bombing.
  11. Easy going and charming, he made friends easily; adventurous and audacious, his exploits brought both fame and notoriety during his lifetime; intelligent but irresponsible, he made and squandered a fortune in a few years; all in all, he was an eccentric who lived life to the full.
  12. Stephen Gold, who gained notoriety for his part in hacking into the Duke of Edinburgh's Prestel mailbox, said that the law would not be enforceable.
  13. The frank accounts of two early love affairs, adding some notoriety to a political autobiography, make honest and sympathetic reading; but of far greater substance is his analysis of British politics from Wilson to Major.

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