p pa pb pc pd pe pf pg ph pi pk pl pm pn po pp pr ps pt pu pv pw px py

Перевод: preoccupation speek preoccupation


[существительное]
занятие места раньше; озабоченность ; рассеянность


Тезаурус:

  1. Hackers talking about their preoccupation may have glazed eyes, they can see the true Light at the end of their programming tunnel.
  2. Spain, its two kingdoms brought together by the dual monarchy of the Catholic Kings, Ferdinand and Isabella, and beginning to benefit from the riches of the New World, was emerging out of its previous isolation and preoccupation with internal affairs to become one of the two dominant powers of Europe.
  3. He walked into the corridor, tiredness suddenly overcoming him with the prospect of a few hours off, and very nearly knocked Catherine Crane over in his preoccupation.
  4. The chapter on "Human Preoccupation with Immortality" makes some interesting speculations on a probable origin of this.
  5. In Le Voyeur (1955), the intense preoccupation with specific objects which the travelling watch salesman displays - the figure-of-eight patterns, the girl's neck, the rope, the cinema poster - is contrived to function as an index of his guilt: Mathias is incriminated by the narrative, although his guilt is never proved conclusively.
  6. Bauer was on the Left, so, unlike Renner, his central preoccupation was with the creation of a united working-class movement for the achievement of a socialist State, but undertaken in conditions where nationalism continually divided the workers.
  7. Indeed, at the centre of the preoccupation with declining standards and mounting disorder, there is an immense historical "black hole".
  8. Eighteenth-century literary biography reiterates the preoccupation with the benevolent patriarch by providing examples of men-centered women, "daddy's girls", among them Elizabeth Carter, Hannah More, Maria Edgeworth, and Fanny Burney.
  9. Secondly, there was a preoccupation with teaching materials and teaching methods (specially innovatory ones).
  10. "Preoccupation with keeping afloat in a cruel environment produced an indifference to questions about the meaning of the world and a good deal of scepticism about most schemes for changing it."
  11. While superficially this sounds sensible enough, other countries including the UK are concerned that it will reinforce the suspicion across the Atlantic and in Asia that the EC's main preoccupation is to build a fortress Europe from which all others are excluded.
  12. What an international perspective can add is a sense of the contradictions or points of stress in the new structures: the attempt to shift the whole system by floods of detailed description and prescription and the consequent overloading of channels of communication; the preoccupation with assessment to the point where it may overwhelm the teaching; the ambivalent character of statutory syllabuses as being at once central regulation and individual entitlement; the potentially disruptive and anomalous role of governing bodies which may act simply as local guardians of centrally determined norms, but may also be educated to accept more subtle and flexible views of what schools can and should do, and may develop the political clout to do something about it.
  13. Second, this type of analysis shifts primary attention away from the preoccupation of conservation policy-makers, academics and consultants with institution-building, training government officers in environmental awareness, tightening up and rationalisation of administrative and legislative procedures.

LMBomber - программа для запоминания иностранных слов

Copyright © Perevod-Translate.ru