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Перевод: vested speek vested


[прилагательное]
законный; принадлежащий по праву; облаченный


Тезаурус:

  1. Now in drama an excessive degree of vested interest in either the technical aspects or in the substance of the subject-matter can upset the balance so that the "game" of drama and the necessary spontaneity that goes with it disappear.
  2. The feast of St Edward on October 13, saw a parade of priests (see picture top left), all similarly vested, around Bishop Joseph Gray, who presided at the mass.
  3. The radical Right drew attention to the fact that the public sector sheltered powerful vested interests whose claims for greater resources were theoretically boundless.
  4. Throughout Europe vested interests in the medical profession, supported by opposition parties hungry for votes and journalists eager for copy, have mounted vigorous protests in favour of the status quo.
  5. At the turn of the eleventh and twelfth centuries the Norman Anonymous (formerly known as the Anonymous of York) wrote that "the king reigns with Christ", reflecting the common doctrine of the tenth and early eleventh centuries that the king was Christ's vicar, that he was rex et sacerdos , that although he could not administer the sacraments, he ruled over the Church as well as over his temporal kingdom, that all authority was vested in him.
  6. "It involved important questions: about the very meaning of ordination, about the nature of the Eucharist and the unique role of the priest in that celebration, and most particularly about the authority vested in any individual Church to overturn unilaterally the unvarying practice throughout the centuries of the Catholic and apostolic Church.
  7. He creates a new set of skills, not the skills to do with refinement of speech that the Speech and Drama experts had a vested interest in, but life-skills.
  8. But authority was vested in the nobility, who held their power from the emperor.
  9. In this sense it would be naive to make "policy recommendations", given that a central tenet of this work is that "policy" is more the product of a particular set of vested interests than a technocratic implementation of neutral measures.
  10. It has shown instead how deeply entrenched the "vested interests" have become.
  11. But medieval England, no less than now, was full of all manner of self-appointed scholars, administrators, and general schemers with a vested interest in obfuscation; and with what pleasure, by 1651, says the OED , was it "applied contemptuously to the language of scholars, the terminology of a science or art, or the cant of class, sect, trade, or profession".
  12. Incompatibility of vested interests.
  13. Men like Pericles controlled policy not through any power vested in them but only so long as they could persuade the people.

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