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Перевод: privy
[прилагательное] частный; посвященный; скрытый; тайный; уединенный; сокровенный; конфиденциальный; [существительное] заинтересованное лицо; уборная
Тезаурус:
- The Australian initiative was rejected both by the Privy Council and the English courts, largely on the grounds that the common-law precedents were not compelling, that the full defence of self-defence should be applied indulgently in favour of those who use such force as they instinctively think necessary, and that the doctrine of provocation might be used to accommodate other cases.
- A strong force in the discussions was the Canadian-born Lord Beaverbrook, who had now replaced Cranborne as Lord Privy Seal.
- Amid all the excitement and turbulence of the days after an election, newly appointed cabinet ministers must find a moment to learn how to kneel and kiss the hand of the Queen, in order that they may become members of the Queen's Privy Council, together with opposition leaders, selected Commonwealth statesmen, churchmen like the Archbishop of Canterbury and senior civil servants.
- Happily, with some strong thigh'd bargemen; Or one o'th' wood-yard, that can quoit the sledge Or toss the bar, or else some lovely squire That carries coals up to her privy lodgings.
- Here he was, a civilian, suddenly being made privy to enormous affairs of state.
- It may be, says George, that the public should be privy to the codes which doctors use to rustle up data on drugs on their TV screens.
- The old offices of Lord President and Lord Privy Seal may conveniently be used for this purpose.
- He speaks to his counterparts in the offices of the Prime Minister, the Foreign Secretary, the Cabinet Office, Home Office and Privy Council office several times every week, often every day.
- The Cabinet is, technically, a committee of the Privy Council.
- They were given briefings by North or sometimes by Abrams in the Old Executive Office Building, shown photographs of airports and harbours, and made privy to mysterious movements of Soviet aircraft and ships.
- This, as Economist journalists discovered, proved to be a highly unorthodox meeting, as two outsiders, neither of whom were bound by the Privy Counsellor's oath of confidentiality, were in attendance: "Chaired by Mrs Thatcher, the meeting was attended, unusually, for part of the time, by two outsiders: Sir John Cuckney, Westland's chairman and Mr Marcus Agius, a director of Lazard's, Westland's financial advisers."
- Even her guru, Pete Waterman, was not privy to the secret preparations for the opening concerts in Japan and Britain.
- He became the secretary of a standing committee of veterinary surgeons dedicated to petitioning the Privy Council for a Royal Charter "conferring upon the graduates of the Royal Veterinary College and the College of Edinburgh the title of the Royal College of Veterinary Surgeons, upon the same plan and constitution as the present Royal College of Surgeons".
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