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Перевод: vilification
[существительное] поношение [существительное]
Тезаурус:
- In case you fail to appreciate the lustre of this honour, I should point out that you have to do something pretty dreadful to be singled out for vilification in a sermon.
- There was a further link with editors, not such a happy one, for false reports and rumours were constantly appearing, and what seemed to be a campaign of vilification of the police.
- During his nearly three years as effective day-to-day leader of the Cultural Revolution, Chen, along with Jiang Qing and Mao's security chief Kang Sheng, helped orchestrate campaigns of vilification and persecution against thousands of party cadres, including the then head of state Liu Shaoqi, who later died alone in a bank vault used as a cell.
- Insecurity, hunger, constant vilification and injustice were their lot, and it was as exhausted escapees that they made their way from Europe via Liverpool to Halifax (then the most important port on the Atlantic coast), before finally settling in Montreal.
- From its earliest days it has been the target of media vilification for its gay programming.
- Splitting creates idealized images as well as vilification: the quiet, kindly grandmother, the benevolent granddad, the wise elder, set against the dried-up spinster, the interfering granny, the miser, the dirty old man, the bedsoiler.
- In such circumstances, clearly the more vilification the better.
- But the Jezebel poems went far beyond vilification of Elizabeth.
- When the dust settled yesterday Michael Knighton, a thwarted professional footballer who has been elected to the Manchester United board, spoke bitterly of the vilification he claims to have endured since moving in on the club and Martin Edwards, the chief executive.
- For all the Reaganite vilification heaped on it, the EPA grew, prospered and regulated mightily in the 1980s.
- It was a press vilification that deeply injured Bremner's sense of personal integrity, and like a tackle from behind, he refused to take it lying down.
- As a Daily Telegraph labour correspondent then, I recall starting each day with a work schedule that sometimes involved keeping tabs on a dozen running disputes, from claim (it was usually over pay) through the gritty ritual of offer, rejection, negotiation, walk-out, stand-off, vilification, arbitration, mass meeting and settlement.
- Officially what Knighton called "the vilification" is over, the two men are friends and colleagues again.
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