c
ca
cb
cc
cd
ce
cf
cg
ch
ci
ck
cl
cm
cn
co
cp
cr
cs
ct
cu
cw
cy
cz
Перевод: concurrence
[существительное] совпадение; стечение обстоятельств; согласованность ; согласие [существительное]
Тезаурус:
- Like most of their contemporaries, Marx and Engels assumed that there was something inevitable about the concurrence of slavery and a particular type of economy or technology.
- Either way it is likely, as Palmerston said of a projected coalition with Disraeli in 1857, to be little more than "the accident and fortuitous concurrence of atoms".
- From a legal point of view, however, such concurrence from a relative is of no effect, since there is no power vested in a relative to consent to the treatment of another.
- SHe'd been charting possible escape routes for a while now, the main reason for not taking advantage of them being a certain concurrence with Jahsaxa's opinion that blackouts could occur on the street.
- He laughs concurrence.
- Simply a concurrence of events which one will inevitably encounter every now and then if the law of averages is to be believed.
- They will have to be approved by the Lord Chancellor and be subject to the "concurrence" of four senior Supreme Court judges, of whom Lord Donaldson will be one.
- Alternatively, the doctor may seek the concurrence of a relative who is neither a parent nor a guardian.
- This concurrence of anthropology and Christian belief was, similarly, what attracted Eliot to Demant, who was editor of the 1944 lectures, Our Culture: Its Christian Roots and Present Crisis .
- The reason for this was to avoid concurrence with the Jewish Passover.
- Election Focus:A Hung Parliament: The concurrence of atoms Andrew Roberts looks at the history of political pacts in Britain and finds them disliked, short-lived - and heartening for the Tories
- The Sports Council will await Universiade GB's concurrence with the deal before nominating their man, but it ought to be one of their members with business acumen - which means either David Simon of BP, who is most unlikely to have the time, Raymond Michel, formerly with a distillery, or Norman Jacobs, a partner in one of Britain's largest firms of solicitors.
- Under the English White Paper, rights of audience rules drawn up by the Law Society in conjunction with an advisory committee will be subject to the "concurrence" of four senior judges.
|