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Перевод: arrogate speek arrogate


[глагол]
требовать; дерзко требовать; дерзко претендовать; самонадеянно претендовать; присваивать; без основания приписывать


Тезаурус:

  1. Callinicos' criticism of the "postmodern" hypothesis contains a range of emphases, the three principal ones of which are: First: advocates of the postmodern in art (which attains uncommon prominence in so far as the "postmodern" is powerfully underwritten by a claimed distinction from Modernism), tend to misread the modern and arrogate its defining characteristics to their own period.
  2. They cannot, however, be allowed to arrogate to employers powers to dismiss unreasonably.
  3. I do not arrogate to myself a knowledge superior to that of the professionals, but I have had imposed on me the obligation to exercise a quasi-judicial function in assessing applications.
  4. Why does he arrogate to himself the claim to know more about patient care than all those professionals?
  5. Calvin's doctrine of election had the consequence that no earthly priesthood could arrogate the authority to determine whether an individual was of the elect.
  6. If a power of appointment, either in law or in fact, is vested in trade unions, the effect is not only to arrogate to them rights attaching only to ownership, but to establish them in this particular matter as the constitutional equals of Parliament.
  7. Governments should not be deluded into thinking that they can arrogate to themselves powers that they do not and cannot possess.
  8. During and following the Gorbachev era there were numerous complaints about the tendency of presidents to arrogate more power to themselves on the grounds that it was a temporary measure to deal with the extremely serious economic and social situation facing the republics.
  9. Federalism in its German form betrays a highly teleological view of politics, and its theorists arrogate to themselves assumptions and imperatives which are at best matters for the Church, but can never be pronounced on by politicians.
  10. There are presses which are strictly private in the Carter sense, operating in anything from a back kitchen to a fully equipped shop, perhaps content simply to joy in the smell of printer's ink and the magic of creation, without aiming to sell a single book; publishing firms calling themselves presses who rightly pride themselves on the high quality of their output; commercial printers who are equally jealous of the standard of their press work; teaching establishments attached to universities, colleges and schools for experimental and training purposes; official presses, controlled by governmental or other agencies; fugitive and clandestine presses, often short-lived and hazardously operated, because of an adverse political or religious climate, or because their owners are dodging copyright laws; and there is a hotch-potch of firms who pretentiously arrogate to themselves the word "press", to which they have little or no right in terms of either fine printing or independence.

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