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Перевод: taboo speek taboo


[прилагательное]
священный; запретный; запрещенный; непечатный; непристойный;
[существительное]
табу; запрещение; запрет ;
[глагол]
подвергать табу; запрещать; бойкотировать


Тезаурус:

  1. So far, the free world has liked him both for having been, and for having ceased to be, a communist of a sort, for the freedoms he seeks in matters of literary form, for the modern inventiveness and manipulation of the literary games he plays, games that none the less commemorate, as he acknowledges, Cervantes, Sterne and Diderot, and for the sexual games which he plays in an age when, as he once put it, sexuality has ceased to be taboo.
  2. Swearing and taboo language, for instance, are strongly linked to both class and gender in exactly the way you would predict.
  3. That such cases brought a hitherto taboo subject into the open is a welcome sign that such a fundamental issue as a child's right to live will no longer be determined by small groups of people who through lack of a real knowledge of the subject may come to devastatingly wrong decisions.
  4. It is every bit as easy as teaching it that chickens, ducks, turkeys and sheep are taboo.
  5. The blue and yellow uniforms lent the scene a colourfulness not to be found in Britain, save perhaps in military ceremonial, and I could not but wonder why in our churches and social life colour has become so taboo.
  6. Perhaps some positive aspects are contained within fat's designation as taboo; for instance, some people find fat attractive because it is forbidden and marginal: "It may be that the forbidden is exciting because it is forbidden.
  7. Then one night I went out and I met this DJ from Taboo, which was a club at the time.
  8. Expressing such views requires courage because it would appear to be taboo to talk about protecting fee income.
  9. But the female pop psyche was split; its dark underbelly exited in the black RB and jazz singers of the time, for whom commercial success was rare and sexuality wasn't such a taboo; it was OK for them to wear come-hither clothes, drink hard liquor and sing about bad men.
  10. Everywhere in the modern world death is taboo.
  11. The view that the Lord's Day is essentially the Jewish Sabbath - a "taboo" day - transferred from the seventh to the first day of the week found expression from time to time in medieval law and theology.
  12. But sales are now rising by about 50 per cent a year as the idea loses its social taboo.
  13. THROUGH THE DEVIL'S GATEWAY Women, Religion and Taboo Edited by Alison Joseph

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