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Перевод: stoic
[прилагательное] стоический; [существительное] стоик
Тезаурус:
- "It's only a small blister," said one stoic sergeant from the RAF Regiment.
- To be sure, the characteristics of the transcendent self remain in play: to become what others saw him as being required great self-discipline "similar to spiritual exercises"; eventually he aspires to a classical stoic independence of spirit, a kind of sainthood (p. 146).
- Justin was convinced that in the highminded Stoic ethics of human brotherhood, and especially in the other-worldly Platonic metaphysics, there was much for a Christian to welcome.
- And when the great gentleman detective got hold of the village postman and subjected him to an interrogation which ranged from what he had eaten for breakfast to whether or not he possessed a wireless set and if so what he had listened to on the previous morning, Sergeant Bramble maintained a stoic countenance.
- All four still look as though they'd be more comfortable in jail than in a rhinestone suit, while their voices remain wonderfully battered instruments - weathered, stoic and yet still full of yearning.
- These questions were to make John Milton abandon any discernable belief in the doctrine of Grace and become a sort of Stoic.
- For Cave, the sole possibility for heroism is in fatalism, a stoic dignity in the face of your plight, the blight that is your negative birthright.
- In his frustration, Miles led Joseph back to his command tent, where, in flagrant violation of the flag of truce, he took the stoic chief prisoner.
- Mr Fallon, known as the man who described the TV series Neighbours as "junk", has a look of stoic resignation, almost as if some injustice has occurred, while his wife registers a wary but altogether more wistful expression.
- There was the stoic, mute Joe Louis, with his cruising menace; the streetfighter Rocky Marciano, with his trade-unionist obedience; the arresting and dogged Floyd Patterson, who would bare his soul to a telephone pole at the sight of a pencil; all unfrivolous men who left no doubt as to the nature of their work.
- Justin came from Nablus in Palestine to Ephesus where, according to his own account (which may not be plain prose), he studied with teachers of several different schools - Stoic, Aristotelian, Pythagorean, Platonist - expecting from the last named not only clarity for his mind but light for his soul.
- His thought had been moving towards an idea of nature, not unlike that found in some Stoic philosophers, as a complex of processes subject to their own natural law.
- A stoic quality keeps him from talking about the problem, which is silly; even Nicklaus discusses his back, made ancient by millions of swings and uneven leg lengths.
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